Patients with acute leukemia develop venous thrombosis (VT) related to central venous catheters (CVCs). Anticoagulation (AC) in these patients who are thrombocytopenic and often coagulopathic is challenging. To evaluate the safety and efficacy of AC in treating CVC-related VT, we retrospectively compared outcomes of patients with acute leukemia who were treated or not with AC during induction chemotherapy and post-discharge. Twenty-one patients with CVC-related VT received AC, 14 did not. VT resolved in 80% of patients in the AC group (similarly with low-dose and high-dose enoxaparin) and 45% in the non-AC group (p = 0.11). Fourteen (67%) patients in the AC group are alive (median survival not reached), compared to four patients (29%) in the non-AC group (median survival 9 months) (p = 0.015) with a hazard ratio (HR) of 0.32 (95% confidence interval: 0.12-0.85) in favor of AC. HR remained < 1 after adjustments for leukemia type and cytogenetics. Bleeding (< grade 4) occurred in five and one patients in the AC vs. non-AC groups, respectively (p = 0.37).
Keywords: Myeloid leukemias and dysplasias; clinical results; pharmacotherapeutics.