Abstract
Interventions for thrombotic and nonthrombotic venous disorders have increased with technical advances and more trained venous specialists. Antithrombotic therapy is essential to clinical and procedural success; however, postprocedural therapeutic regimens exhibit significant heterogeneity due to limited prospective randomized data and incomplete mechanistic understanding of the critical factors driving long-term patency. Postinterventional antithrombotic therapy for thrombotic venous disorders should adhere to existing venous thromboembolism management guidelines, which include 3–6 months of therapeutic anticoagulation at minimum and consideration of extended therapy in patients with higher risk of thrombosis because of procedural or patient factors. The added benefit of antiplatelet agents in the acute and intermediate period is unknown, having shown improved long-term stent patency in some retrospective studies. Dual- and/or triple-agent therapy should be limited based on individual risks of thrombosis and bleeding. The treatment of nonthrombotic disorders is more heterogeneous, though patients with limited flow, extensive stent material, or underlying prothrombotic states such as malignancy or chronic inflammation may benefit from single-agent or multiagent antithrombotic therapy. However, the agent, dose, and duration of therapy remain indeterminate. Future prospective studies are warranted to improve patient risk stratification and standardize postprocedural antithrombotic therapy in patients receiving venous interventions.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 175-187 |
Number of pages | 13 |
Journal | American Journal of Roentgenology |
Volume | 219 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Aug 2022 |
Funding
S. Kishore is a paid consultant for Inari Medical, receives research support from Boston Scientific, and serves on the advisory board for TriSalus Life Sciences. M. S. Khaja receives speaking honoraria from Boston Scientific, Medtronic, and Penumbra and research support from Boston Scientific and the SIR Foundation. A. M. Sharma receives speaking honoraria and research support from Boston Scientific and research support from Vascular Medcure. S. Mantha is an organizing member for Daboia Consulting LLC and receives an honorarium from MJH and Associates. K. R. Desai serves on the speakers bureau and is a paid consultant for Cook Medical, Boston Scientific, Becton Dickinson/CR Bard, Medtronic, Penumbra, and Tactile Medical and is a paid consultant for Philips, W.L. Gore, Cordis, Shockwave Medical, Asahi Intecc, and Vesper Medical. A. K. Sista is an unpaid consultant for Thrombolex, Abbott, Medtronic, and Angiody-namics. S. A. Black is a paid consultant for and receives research support from Medtronic and Boston Scientific and is a paid consultant for Cook Medical, W.L. Gore, Philips, Vesper Medical, Surmodics, and Inari Medical. G. J. O’Sullivan serves on the speakers bureau for Boston Scientific, Becton Dickinson/CR Bard, Medtronic, and Cook Medical; is a paid advisor for Mermaid Medical, WhiteSwell, Surmodics, and Merit Medical; and is a paid advisor for and owns equity in Marvao Medical. J. A. Kaufman is a paid consultant for Cook Medical, serves on the advisory board for Argon Medical, and owns equity in Auxetics, Inc. L. V. Hofmann receives royalties from and is a paid consultant for Cook Medical, is a paid consultant and serves on the advisory board for Boston Scientific, is the founder of and owns equity in Grand Rounds, and is a paid consultant for Becton Dickinson/CR Bard and Johnson and Johnson. R. S. Winokur serves on the speakers bureau for Penumbra and is a paid consultant for Becton Dickinson/CR Bard, Cordis, Inari Medical, Medtronic, Mentice, Philips, and Tactile Medical. The remaining authors declare that they have no disclosures relevant to the subject matter of this article.
Keywords
- angioplasty
- anticoagulation
- antiplatelet
- antithrombotic
- deep vein thrombosis
- guidelines
- iliocaval
- iliofemoral
- portal vein
- postthrombotic syndrome
- splanchnic vein thrombosis
- stent
- thrombosis
- vein
- vena cava
- venous
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging