Use of heparins in patients with cancer : individual participant data metaanalysis of randomised trials study protocol

ABSTRACT: Introduction: Parenteral anticoagulants may improve outcomes in patients with cancer by reducing risk of venous thromboembolic disease and through a direct antitumor effect. Study-level systematic reviews indicate a reduction in venous thromboembolism and provide moderate confidence that a...

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Autores:
Flórez Gómez, Iván Darío
Ventresca, Matthew
Crowther, Mark
Schünemann, Holger J.
Briel, Matthias
Zhou, Qi
García, David
Lyman, Gary
Noble, Simon
Macbeth, Fergus
Griffiths, Gareth
DiNisio, Marcello
Lorio, Alfonso
Beyene, Joseph
Mbuagbaw, Lawrence
Neumann, Ignacio
Van Es, Nick
Brouwers, Melissa
Brozek, Jan
Guyatt, Gordon
Levine, Mark
Moll, Stephan
Santesso, Nancy
Streiff, Michael
Baldeh, Tejan
Gurunlu Alma, Ozlem
Solh, Ziad
Ageno, Walter
Marcucci, Maura
Bozas, George
Zulian, Gilbert
Maraveyas, Anthony
Lebeau, Bernard
Buller, Harry
Evans, Jessica
McBane, Robert
Bleker, Suzanne
Pelzer, Uwe
Akl, Elie A.
Tipo de recurso:
Review article
Fecha de publicación:
2016
Institución:
Universidad de Antioquia
Repositorio:
Repositorio UdeA
Idioma:
eng
OAI Identifier:
oai:bibliotecadigital.udea.edu.co:10495/32152
Acceso en línea:
https://hdl.handle.net/10495/32152
Palabra clave:
Anticoagulantes
Anticoagulants
Esquema de Medicación
Drug Administration Schedule
Heparina
Heparin
Neoplasias
Neoplasms
Calidad de Vida
Quality of Life
Tromboembolia Venosa
Venous Thromboembolism
Rights
openAccess
License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/co/
Description
Summary:ABSTRACT: Introduction: Parenteral anticoagulants may improve outcomes in patients with cancer by reducing risk of venous thromboembolic disease and through a direct antitumor effect. Study-level systematic reviews indicate a reduction in venous thromboembolism and provide moderate confidence that a small survival benefit exists. It remains unclear if any patient subgroups experience potential benefits. Methods and analysis: First, we will perform a comprehensive systematic search of MEDLINE, EMBASE and The Cochrane Library, hand search scientific conference abstracts and check clinical trials registries for randomized control trials of participants with solid cancers who are administered parenteral anticoagulants. We anticipate identifying at least 15 trials, exceeding 9000 participants. Second, we will perform an individual participant data meta-analysis to explore the magnitude of survival benefit and address whether subgroups of patients are more likely to benefit from parenteral anticoagulants. All analyses will follow the intention-to-treat principle. For our primary outcome, mortality, we will use multivariable hierarchical models with patient-level variables as fixed effects and a categorical trial variable as a random effect. We will adjust analysis for important prognostic characteristics. To investigate whether intervention effects vary by predefined subgroups of patients, we will test interaction terms in the statistical model. Furthermore, we will develop a risk-prediction model for venous thromboembolism, with a focus on control patients of randomized trials. Ethics and dissemination: Aside from maintaining participant anonymity, there are no major ethical concerns. This will be the first individual participant data meta-analysis addressing heparin use among patients with cancer and will directly influence recommendations in clinical practice guidelines. Major cancer guideline development organizations will use eventual results to inform their guideline recommendations. Several knowledge users will disseminate results through presentations at clinical rounds as well as national and international conferences. We will prepare an evidence brief and facilitate dialogue to engage policymakers and stakeholders in acting on findings.