Elsevier

Thrombosis Research

Volume 199, March 2021, Pages 85-96
Thrombosis Research

Clinical Studies
Prediction models for recurrence and bleeding in patients with venous thromboembolism: A systematic review and critical appraisal

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.thromres.2020.12.031Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Deciding on duration of anticoagulation for venous thromboembolism is challenging.

  • Prediction models for recurrence and bleeding after 3 months were critically appraised.

  • Existing models have methodological limitations and insufficient predictive accuracy.

  • This questions their use to decide about continuing anticoagulation beyond 3 months.

Abstract

Introduction

Prediction models for recurrence and bleeding are infrequently used when deciding on anticoagulant treatment duration after venous thromboembolism (VTE) due to concerns about performance and validity. Our aim was to critically appraise these models by systematically summarizing data from derivation and validation studies.

Materials and methods

MEDLINE and CENTRAL were searched until November 15th, 2019. Studies on prediction models for recurrence or bleeding after at least 3 months of anticoagulation in adult patients with VTE were included. The PROBAST, ROBINS-I and RoB2 tools were used to assess risk of bias and applicability.

Results

Selection yielded 18 studies evaluating 8 models for recurrence (7 on development; 9 on validation; 1 update). Generally, models for recurrent VTE appeared to perform poorly to moderately in external validation studies (C-statistics 0.39–0.66, one 0.83). However, impact studies show that HERDOO2 and Vienna prediction model may identify patients with unprovoked VTE at low recurrence risk. Sixteen studies evaluating 14 models for anticoagulation-related bleeding were identified (7 on development; 9 on validation). Although some models seemed promising in development studies, their predictive performance was poor to moderate in external validation (C-statistics 0.52–0.71). All but 3 studies were considered at high risk of bias, mainly due to limitations in the statistical analysis.

Conclusions

Prognostic models for recurrence and anticoagulation-related bleeding risk often have important methodological limitations and insufficient predictive accuracy. These findings do not support their use in clinical practice to weigh risks of recurrence and bleeding when deciding on continuing anticoagulation after initial treatment of VTE.

Keywords

Hemorrhage
Recurrence
Risk
Systematic review
Venous thromboembolism

Cited by (0)

This paper (poster) was presented at the digital International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis (ISTH) Congress 2020, at July 12–14, 2020.