Current Treatments
VTE prevention: available therapies are underused
{+}
A recent multinational study exposes the scope of the problem: based on standard criteria established by the American College of Chest Physicians, only 59% of surgical patients and 40% of medical patients at risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) received appropriate preventive treatment.2
A review of the efficacy and limitations of current anticoagulant and antiplatelet treatments can provide insight into current practice patterns ā and support the pressing need for new approaches to treatment and prevention.3
Antiplatelet therapy
Current approaches to antithrombotic therapy
Mechanical devices
Anticoagulants
- 1 - Lapostolle F, Surget V, Borron SW, et al. Severe pulmonary embolism associated with air travel. N Engl J Med. 2001;345(11):779-783.
- 2 - Moll S, Mackman N. Venous thromboembolism: a need for more public awareness and research into mechanisms. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2008;28(3):367-369.
- 3 - Geerts WH, Bergqvist D, Pineo GF, Heit JA, Samama CM, Lassen MR, and Colwell CW. Prevention of Venous Thromboembolism: American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP) Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guidelines (8th Edition). Chest. Jun 2008: 381Sā453S.
- American College of Chest Physicians
- Multidisciplinary international medical society based in Northbrook, Illinois, USA, that focuses on the treatment and prevention of all diseases of the chest. It has over 16,000 active members with physicians representing all chest medicine disciplines. Publishes the journal Chest.
- Venous thromboembolism
- A condition in which a blood clot (thrombus) forms in a vein, which in some cases then breaks free and enters the circulation as an embolus, finally lodging in and completely obstructing a blood vessel, e.g., in lungs causing a PE. The term encompasses both DVT and PE.

