Recurrent venous thromboembolism and bleeding with extended anticoagulation: the VTE-PREDICT risk score
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31970Date
2023-01-17Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
De Winter, Maria A.; Büller, Harry R.; Carrier, Marc; Cohen, Alexander T.; Hansen, John Bjarne; Kaasjager, Karin A. H.; Kakkar, Ajay K.; Middeldorp, Saskia; Raskob, Gary E.; Sørensen, Henrik T.; Visseren, Frank L. J.; Wells, Philip S.; Dorresteijn, Jannick A. N.; Nijkeuter, Mathilde; Brækkan, Sigrid KufaasAbstract
Methods and results Competing risk-adjusted models were derived to predict recurrent VTE and clinically relevant bleeding (non-major and major) using 14 readily available patient characteristics. The models were derived from combined individual patient data from the Bleeding Risk Study, Hokusai-VTE, PREFER-VTE, RE-MEDY, and RE-SONATE (n = 15,141, 220 recurrences, 189 bleeding events). External validity was assessed in the Danish VTE cohort, EINSTEIN-CHOICE, GARFIELD-VTE, MEGA, and Tromsø studies (n = 59 257, 2283 recurrences, 3335 bleeding events). Absolute treatment effects were estimated by combining the models with hazard ratios from trials and meta-analyses. External validation in different settings showed agreement between predicted and observed risks up to 5 years, with C-statistics ranging from 0.48–0.71 (recurrence) and 0.61–0.68 (bleeding). In the Danish VTE cohort, 5-year risks ranged from 4% to 19% for recurrent VTE and 1% –19% for bleeding.
Conclusion The VTE-PREDICT risk score can be applied to estimate the effect of extended anticoagulant treatment for individual patients with VTE and to support shared decision-making.