A Clearinghouse for Information about Blood Clots (DVT/)PE) and Clotting Disorders (thrombophilia) provided as a public service by the University of North Carolina Blood Research Center

Tag: DVT

  • NEJM Publication: Edoxaban for VTE Treatment

    Stephan Moll, MD writes…  Today, Sept 1st, 2013, the New England Journal of Medicine published the phase 3 clinical trial of edoxaban versus warfarin in the treatment of DVT and PE [ref 1]. It showed that edoxaban was as effective as warfarin and led to less clinically relevant bleeding.

  • International Coagulation Meeting (ISTH 2013): Highlights

    Stephan Moll, MD writes…  A major international coagulation conference, the bi-annual meeting of the International Society for Thrombosis and Haemostasis (ISTH; http://www.isth.org), took place in Amsterdam, Holland, from June 29th to July 4th, 2013.  The clinically relevant highlights about thrombosis and anticoagulation are summarized below.

  • New Publication: Eliquis (Apixaban) is Effective and Safe in DVT and PE

    Stephan Moll, MD writes…   An important study (AMPLIFY trial) was published today in the New England Journal of Medicine [ref 1]: In a large study of 5395 patients with acute DVT or PE, Eliquis (apixaban) was as effective as warfarin and caused less major bleeding.

  • Xarelto (Rivaroxaban) – Hospital Guideline

    Stephan Moll, MD writes… Xarelto® is FDA approved for treatment of venous thromboembolism (VTE), prevention of VTE after hip and knee replacement  surgery, and for atrial fibrillation.   A number of practical management questions are encountered by physicians, pharmacists, and other health care professional taking care of patients on Xarelto®, such as (a) dosing in…

  • Does Aspirin Prevent Recurrent DVT and PE? – ASPIRE Trial

    Stephan Moll, MD writes… Well, it is not clear whether it does.  A clinically relevant study (ASPIRE study) was published this week (Nov 22nd,2012) in the N Engl J Med  [ref 1].  In patients who had a previous unprovoked (= idiopathic) DVT or PE and who had completed standard length (often considered to be 3-6 months)…

  • Behind the headlines: Does eating lunch at your desk increase blood clot risk?

    Beth Waldron,  Program Director of Clot Connect, writes… The claim:  “Eating lunch at your desk could increase your risk of DVT”—was the dramatic headline from UK’s Marie Claire magazine which caught my attention. (1)  The online story went on to say that “Almost 75 per cent of office staff aged 21-30 who work 10-hour days…

  • Klippel-Trenaunay Syndrome, DVT and PE

    Stephan Moll, MD writes…  Klippel-Trenaunay Syndrome (KTS) is a rare congenital disorder of capillary, venous and lymphatic malformations and a localized disturbed growth of bone and/or soft tissue (see photographs)[ref 1].  Patients with KTS are at significantly increased risk for DVT, PE and superficial thrombophlebitis.  KTS affects only one side of the body, typically the leg or the…

  • Aspirin Prevents Recurrent DVT and PE – WARFASA Study

    Stephan Moll, MD writes… A clinically very relevant study (WARFASA) published today (May 24, 2012) in the New England Journal of Medicine [ref 1] shows that aspirin, 100 mg per day, reduces the risk of recurrent venous thromboembolism (VTE) in patients with unprovoked (= idiopathic) VTE, who have completed 6 to 18 months of anticoagulant therapy, without…