Prevention of Postoperative Venous Thromboembolism in Thoracic Surgical Patients: Implementation and Evaluation of a Caprini Risk Assessment Protocol

2016 
Background Venous thromboembolism (VTE) can be a devastating postoperative complication, with about one-third of VTEs occurring post-discharge. We previously retrospectively evaluated the Caprini VTE risk assessment model (RAM) in postoperative lung and esophageal cancer patients, demonstrating that "high risk" patients were more likely to have a postoperative VTE. In this study, we sought to implement the RAM protocol in thoracic surgical patients to evaluate adherence, safety, and VTE outcomes. Study Design This prospective cohort study at a large safety net hospital included all surgically treated patients within the thoracic surgery division beginning in July 2014. Per RAM protocol, patients with high risk scores were prescribed a total of 30 days of postoperative daily enoxaparin prophylaxis, and moderate risk patients received a total of 10 postoperative days. Adherence and outcome audits were conducted. Results A total of 126 patients were included for analysis. Provider adherence to RAM score calculation was 99.2% (125 of 126), with appropriate post-discharge prophylaxis prescribed in 96.0% of cases. Twenty-four patients scored high risk (19.2%), 60 were moderate risk (48.0%), and 41 scored low risk (32.8%). Patient adherence to post-discharge enoxaparin prophylaxis was 97.2%. The overall VTE rate was 2.3%, with no post-discharge VTEs or adverse bleeding events. Conclusions Implementation of a VTE risk assessment protocol with extended course prophylaxis in high risk patients is safe and feasible for providers and thoracic surgical patients at a large safety net institution with a diverse patient population. Follow-up studies are needed to assess efficacy of the RAM in this surgical population.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    29
    References
    43
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []