Venous thromboembolism (VTE), including deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE), is a common post-operative complication. The effectiveness of fondaparinux compared with other injectable anticoagulants in VTE following major orthopedic and abdominal surgery has been evaluated in database studies; however, the effectiveness of injectable anticoagulant medications following cancer-related surgeries in the practice setting has not been as well documented. The objective of this study is to analyze patient records from a national hospital database and compare the outcomes and costs between four types of injectable anticoagulant medications that were prescribed for the prevention of VTE following cancer-related surgery. This analysis will assess and quantify the outcomes, resource utilization, and cost of care for patients receiving fondaparinux, enoxaparin, dalteparin or unfractionated heparin. The outcomes of interest include the occurence of VTE, rates of major bleeds, medical resource utilization, and total costs (medical plus pharmacy). The source of data for this study is the Premier Perspective Database™. This hospital claims database links de-identified inpatient medical, pharmacy, and billing data from more than 500 hospitals. This study is a retrospective cohort study that uses propensity score matching to adjust for the differences between the numbers of patients treated with each medication.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
4,068
An injectable anticoagulant medication for the prevention of VTE related to cancer surgery. Patients received dalteparin during one day prior to or two days after cancer-related surgery during the hospitalization.
An injectable anticoagulant medication for the prevention of VTE related to cancer surgery. Patients received enoxaparin during one day prior to or two days after cancer-related surgery during the hospitalization.
An injectable anticoagulant medication for the prevention of VTE related to cancer surgery. Patients received fondaparinux during one day prior to or two days after cancer-related surgery during the hospitalization.
An injectable anticoagulant medication for the prevention of VTE related to cancer surgery. Patients unfractionated heparin received during one day prior to or two days after cancer-related surgery during the hospitalization.
Rate of occurence of venous thromboembolism (VTE) during index hospitalization
VTE events were identified by International Classification of Disease-9 (ICD-9) codes for deep vein thrombosis (451.xx. 453.xx) and pulmonary embolism (415.xx) during the index hospitalization. Results will be calculated, reported as unadjusted, and adjusted to control for the effect of covariates on outcomes
Time frame: Data will be collected over a 5 year and 8 month period with this endpoint evaluated from the date of hospital admission to the date of hospital discharge.
Rate of occurence of major bleeding events during hospitalization
Major bleeding events were identified according to ICD-9 codes for major bleed (568.81, 430.xx, 431.xx, 432.xx, or 998.11) or other bleeding accompanied by more than 2 units of blood transfused (246.3, 286.5, 287.3, 287.4, 287.5, 287.8, 287.9, 459.0, 530.82, 569.3, 578.x, 596.7, 599.7, 719.1, 784.7, 784.8, 786.3, 958.2, or 997.02) as recorded in the billing file during the index hospitalization plus 1 month post discharge. Results will be calculated, reported as unadjusted, and adjusted to control for the effect of covariates on outcomes.
Time frame: Data will be collected over a 5 year and 8 month period with this endpoint evaluated from the date of hospital admission to the date of hospital discharge.
Rate of Hospital readmission rates
Readmission rates were defined as a subsequent hospitalization for major bleeding or VTE that occurred within the follow-up period (discharge month plus 1 month).
Time frame: Data will be collected over a 5 year and 8 month period with this endpoint evaluated at one month following the date of hospital discharge
Mean length of hospital stay in days
Length of hospital stay was obtained from the discharge record and was defined as the number of days from patient admission to the hospital for cancer-related surgery until discharge from the hospital.
Time frame: Data will be collected over a 5 year and 8 month period with this endpoint evaluated from the date of hospital admission to the date of hospital discharge.
Total cost of care for index hospitalization in United States (US) dollars
The mean total costs (medical plus pharmacy costs) from patient records in each antithrombotic cohort from the index hospitalization. Results will be calculated, reported as unadjusted, and adjusted to control for the effect of covariates on outcomes.
Time frame: Data will be collected over a 5 year and 8 month period with this endpoint evaluated from the date of hospital admission to the date of hospital discharge.
Rate of occurence of VTE events during hospitalization plus 1 month post discharge.
VTE events were identified according to ICD-9 codes for DVT and PE during the index hospitalization plus 1 month post discharge. Results will be calculated, reported as unadjusted, and adjusted to control for the effect of covariates on outcomes.
Time frame: Data will be collected over a 5 year and 8 month period with this endpoint evaluated from the date of admission for the index hospitalization to the end of the 1-month post-discharge follow-up period
Rate of occurence of major bleeding events during hospitalization plus 1 month post discharge
Major bleeding events were identified according to ICD-9 codes for hemoperitoneum bleed, intracranial hemorrhage/hemorrhagic stroke, hemorrhage complicating a procedure, or other bleeding accompanied by more than 2 units of blood transfused as recorded in the billing file during the index hospitalization plus 1 month post discharge. Results will be calculated, reported as unadjusted, and adjusted to control for the effect of covariates on outcomes.
Time frame: Data will be collected over a 5 year and 8 month period with this endpoint evaluated from the date of admission for the index hospitalization to the end of the 1-month post-discharge follow-up period
Total cost of care for index hospitalization plus follow up in US dollars
The mean total costs (medical plus pharmacy costs) from patient records in each antithrombotic cohort from both the index hospitalization and the 1-month follow-up period. Results will be calculated, reported as unadjusted, and adjusted to control for the effect of covariates on outcomes
Time frame: Data will be collected over a 5 year and 8 month period with this endpoint evaluated from the date of the index hospitalization to the end of the 1-month post-discharge follow-up period
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