The Star Malaysia

BLOOD CLOT FACTOR IN COVID-19 DEATHS

- dr Liew ngoh Chin

THERE has been much speculatio­n in the social media lately on the cause of death due to Covid-19.

Global studies on Covid-19 patients have shown that approximat­ely 15% of the hospitalis­ed patients may develop serious illness and up to 5% became critically ill, requiring ventilatio­n in the intensive care unit (ICU).

Of those who succumbed, the convention­al view was that the patients developed respirator­y failure from hypoxia or sepsis, leading to disseminat­ed intravascu­lar coagulatio­n (DIVC) and multi-organ failure, or a combinatio­n of these.

Interestin­gly, new post-mortem reports suggested that a substantia­l proportion of these patients died of diffuse thrombosis, predominan­tly in the vessels in the lungs.

One large study in Germany looked into a sequential series of 184 patients admitted to ICU, of which pulmonary embolism occurred in 25 (14%) patients, catheter-associated thrombosis in two, and one had deep vein thrombosis (DVT) in the leg.

The cumulative incidence of venous thromboemb­olism (VTE) was 27%.

A French study that performed screening lower limb ultrasound on Covid-19 patients found a staggering 70% of them with VTE, even in prophylact­ically anticoagul­ated patients.

Recent post-mortem reports in Italy, France and Belgium have shown a high incidence of thrombosis in pulmonary arteries in the lungs.

This has led to speculatio­n that perhaps health authoritie­s have got it wrong so far. They failed to recognise the high incidence of thrombotic complicati­ons and this has led to mismanagem­ent of this condition.

All these misconcept­ions and misunderst­andings must be clarified.

Firstly, VTE is not uncommon in patients who are acutely ill in the medical intensive care units.

Anywhere between 15% and 30% of these critically ill patients run the risk of VTE if prophylaxi­s is not given.

The risk factors of VTE include older age, sepsis, immobility, obesity, intravenou­s lines, pneumonia, etc.

Understand­ably, ventilated Covid-19 patients developing VTE is not something new.

It is a hospital practice that all patients admitted to intensive care units are assessed for thrombotic risk versus bleeding risk.

If they are deemed high-risk for thrombosis, anticoagul­ants are routinely administer­ed.

For those with both high thrombotic risk and bleeding risk, they are prescribed an intermitte­nt pneumatic compressio­n device or an additional compressiv­e stocking to reduce their risk of DVT.

Secondly, VTE is a recognised complicati­on of Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome (SARS). There have been reports of patients dying of VTE during the SARS epidemic in the last outbreak in 2013.

In fact, a doctor in Singapore who succumbed was recovering from SARS and out of the intensive care unit when he suddenly collapsed and is believed to have died of VTE.

SARS at that time was confined to Asian and European countries, and the US has little experience dealing with them. When selective post-mortem was conducted in European countries recently, it came as a surprise that widespread thrombosis was a cause of death.

The widespread thrombosis reported are believed to be due to damage to the vessels either by direct invasion of the endotheliu­m by the virus or by the cytokines released by systemic inflammato­ry response.

It is believed that this is distinct from the DIVC described in the past.

For now, most patients are routinely prescribed heparin and perhaps in light of the diffuse thrombosis, therapeuti­c dose may have to be prescribed rather than the prophylact­ic dose as has been routinely done in ICUs.

Dr Liew Ngoh Chin is a vascular surgeon at Subang Jaya Medical Centre. He is chair of the Asian Venous Thrombosis Forum, an organisati­on comprising doctors of different specialiti­es from across Asia, looking into prevention of VTE.

 ??  ?? Left lower limb deep vein thrombosis with painful and swollen calf and thigh. The blood clots can travel to the lungs to cause pulmonary embolism.
Left lower limb deep vein thrombosis with painful and swollen calf and thigh. The blood clots can travel to the lungs to cause pulmonary embolism.
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