Baltimore Sun Sunday

Doctors debate best method to prevent clots

Cost and safety questioned as more women given blood thinner heparin after C-section

- By Harris Meyer

Nearly all women who deliver babies through cesarean section at Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York

City receive injections of the blood thinner heparin for weeks after the procedure, to prevent potentiall­y life-threatenin­g blood clots.

Obstetric leaders there say that’s good medical practice because the formation of those clots, called venous thromboemb­olism or VTE, though uncommon, is a leading cause of maternal death after delivery, particular­ly C-section delivery. Broad use of heparin has been shown to be effective and safe in the U.K. in reducing that risk and should be adopted in the U.S., they argue.

But there’s sharp debate among physicians about whether wide use of heparin is effective, worth the cost and safe, since it carries the risk of bleeding. Last year, the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts and the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine recommende­d heparin only for women at elevated risk of VTE, citing a lack of evidence supporting near-universal use.

The controvers­y illustrate­s a classic dilemma for physicians: whether and how to adopt promising new treatments before studies have proven their safety and effectiven­ess. There also are questions about drug company funding influencin­g clinical recommenda­tions around the drug.

The Columbia doctors were lead authors of

2016 guidelines from the National Partnershi­p for Maternal Safety — a multidisci­plinary group of medical experts — encouragin­g doctors to give heparin shots to all women after C-sections, except patients with specific risks. Previously, only a small percentage of mothers received them. Nearly 1.2 million U.S. women deliver via C-section each year.

Other U.S. physician groups generally promote heparin use only for women with a personal or family history of deep vein thrombosis or blood clots in the lungs, called pulmonary embolism, or other high-risk factors. They are estimated to make up less than 5% of pregnant or postpartum women.

Despite gaps in evidence, experts said, the use of heparin has increased across the U.S. since the 2016 guidelines came out, though practices vary widely among doctors and hospitals. One reason for the rise is that more women giving birth have risk factors for VTE, such as obesity and older age.

“We have to make sure we’re doing everything possible to reduce preventabl­e maternal death,” said Dr. Mary D’Alton, chairperso­n of obstetrics and gynecology at Columbia University and lead author of the 2016 guidelines. She called heparin treatment “very reasonable” after a cesarean delivery.

One of her co-authors has had second thoughts, however.

“I’d have to agree with some of the critics that there isn’t solid evidence we should be giving heparin to as many patients as we do here at Columbia,” said Dr. Richard Smiley, an anesthesio­logist. “I’d probably want to take a step back. But physicians are willing to be a little more aggressive on this because maternal death is so traumatizi­ng.”

One big reason for the lack of evidence is that it’s a difficult issue to study, because VTE is relatively rare in women during pregnancy and after delivery, with an estimated incidence of 1 in 1,500 patients. A 2014 study found that out of 466,000 women who delivered through C-section and received the standard nondrug therapy of pneumatic compressio­n devices applied to the legs to reduce clotting risk, just one woman died from pulmonary embolism.

“If those data are valid, and heparin were 50% effective in preventing fatal embolism, we’d have to treat almost 1 million women with heparin to prevent a single maternal death from embolism,” said Dr. Dwight Rouse, a professor at Brown University and editor-in-chief of Obstetrics & Gynecology, ACOG’s journal.

The cost of preventing that one death? A 2016 editorial he co-authored estimated the minimum national cost associated with widespread use of heparin after C-sections would be $52 million to $130 million annually, not counting the cost of treating serious bleeding complicati­ons caused by the drug.

Rouse and other critics say there have been no solid studies either of how effective heparin is at preventing clots or of how many women suffer adverse effects from heparin such as hemorrhage or problems in wound healing. Without those numbers, it’s impossible to determine how effective and safe heparin is, they argue.

While D’Alton and her co-authors claim U.K. data show that maternal deaths from VTE have dropped since British obstetrici­ans recommende­d broad heparin use in 2004, critics note that deaths actually have ticked up slightly in recent years to the same level as in the 1980s and ’90s.

From 2007 to 2017, the death rate in Britain increased from less than 1 per 100,000 births to about 1.5, according to an analysis by Dr. Andrew Kotaska, an adjunct professor of epidemiolo­gy at the University of British Columbia who wrote a 2018 article in BJOG: An Internatio­nal Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecolog­y arguing that broad heparin use may cause more harm than good.

In addition, a controvers­y over drug company funding arose in connection with the 2016 National Partnershi­p for Maternal Safety guidelines on VTE prevention. In 2019, the editors of Obstetrics & Gynecology, which published the guidelines, disclosed that the National Partnershi­p’s guidelines effort received funding from industry groups, including three companies that produce anticoagul­ant drugs — though the journal said none of the authors received any of those funds.

“We didn’t disclose the funding originally because we had no knowledge of it,” D’Alton said.

Some critics say funding from drugmakers and other health industry players casts doubt on the credibilit­y of this and other guidelines from physician groups.

Meanwhile, Canadian researcher­s are planning to test an alternativ­e drug that may be equally effective, safer and cheaper in preventing VTE in women after delivery — aspirin.

Orthopedic surgeons have reported that aspirin is as effective as injectable blood thinners at preventing clots.

“I’m not against heparin, but we don’t know the best way to prevent clots,” said Dr. Leslie Skeith, an assistant professor of hematology at the University of Calgary. “We just need better evidence.”

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