Venous Thromboembolism: Role of Vena Cava Filter in the Prophylaxis and Treatment of PE (UPDATE IN PROCESS)
Published 2002
Citation: J Trauma. 53(1):142-164, July 2002.
Authors
Rogers, Frederick B. MD; Cipolle, Mark D. MD, PhD; Velmahos, George MD, PhD; Rozycki, Grace MD; Luchette, Fred A. MD
Author Information
From the University of Vermont, Department of Surgery, Fletcher Allen Health Care (F.B.R.), Burlington, Vermont, Department of Surgery, Lehigh Valley Hospital (M.D.C.), Allentown, Pennsylvania, Department of Surgery, Division of Trauma and Critical Care, University of Southern California (G.V.), Los Angeles, California, Department of Surgery, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, and Department of Surgery, Division of Trauma, Critical Care, and Burns, Loyola University Medical Center (F.A.L.), Maywood, Illinois.
Submitted for publication September 1, 2001.
Accepted for publication March 15, 2002.
Any reference in this guideline to a specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, or manufacturer does not constitute or imply an endorsement, recommendation, or any favoritism by the authors or EAST. The views and opinions of the authors do not necessarily state or reflect those of EAST and shall not be used for advertising or product endorsement purposes.
Address for reprints: Frederick B. Rogers, MD, University of Vermont Department of Surgery, Fletcher Allen Health Care, 111 Colchester Avenue, Burlington, VT 05401; email: frederick.rogers@vtmednet.org.
Statement of the Problem
Vena caval interruption is a form of PE prophylaxis that is being used more frequently in trauma patients. Many trauma patients have ongoing bleeding or recent brain, spinal cord, or ocular injury that will not tolerate even minor amounts of bleeding. These patients cannot have pharmacologic prophylaxis with heparin or heparin-like derivatives. Furthermore, patients with multiple injuries often have extremity injuries, which preclude the use of PCDs. The decision to place a prophylactic vena cava filter (VCF) in a trauma patient requires a fundamental understanding of the risk/benefit ratio. In this review, the risk/benefit ratio is explored in the high-risk trauma patient.
Process
A MEDLINE search from 1980 to 2001 was performed in which vena cava filter was cross-referenced with trauma. Four articles specifically addressed complications and long-term follow up and are included in this review (Table 6).
Recommendations
A. Level I: A Level I recommendation on this topic cannot be supported because of insufficient data.
B. Level II: A Level II recommendation on this topic cannot be supported because of insufficient data.
C. Level III: Insertion of a prophylactic VCF should be considered in very-high-risk trauma patients:
D. 1. Who cannot receive anticoagulation because of increased bleeding risk, and
E. 2. Have an injury patterns rendering them immobilized for a prolonged period of time, including the following:52-69]
F. a. Severe closed head injury (GCS score < 8).
G. b. Incomplete spinal cord injury with paraplegia or quadriplegia.
H. c. Complex pelvic fractures with associated long bone fractures.
I. d. Multiple long bone fractures.
Patients at high risk for bleeding complications for 5 to 10 days after injury would include those with intracranial hemorrhage, ocular injury with associated hemorrhage, solid intra-abdominal organ injury (i.e., liver, spleen, kidney), and/or pelvic or retroperitoneal hematoma requiring transfusion. Other risk factors for bleeding include cirrhosis; active peptic ulcer disease; end-stage renal disease; and coagulopathy caused by injury, medication, or congenital/hereditary. In addition, it appears that age is a significant risk factor for VTE, but it is unclear at what age risk of VTE significantly increases. The need to place a prophylactic VCF may be increased in an older patient with one of the above-mentioned injuries.[70]
Scientific Foundation
The placement of a VCF in a trauma patient who does not have an established DVT or PE is certainly controversial; however, there is no question that VCFs are efficacious. They prevent the occurrence of PE from lower extremity DVT with a success rate of about 98%.[71] The real issue is defining who should receive these filters, and whether they are without significant complications and are cost-effective.
Several studies have reported on the use of VCFs for prophylactic indications. Golueke et al.[72] reported on 21 filters placed prophylactically before total joint replacement. All patients received LDH, aspirin and, when possible, graduated compression stockings. No filter-related complications or episodes of PE occurred in this group. Likewise, in 1992, Webb et al.52] reported their results of using a prophylactic filter in 24 of 52 patients undergoing acetabular fracture repair with sufficient risk factors. No insertion complications were reported. Four patients had leg edema, one with phlegmasia, and no PEs. In the 27 patients who did not receive a filter, 2 PEs were noted, one of which was fatal. Rohrer et al.[73] reported on the use of VCFs for extended indications in 66 patients (many of whom were trauma patients). Only one PE was fatal in this group, and 22 patients had no documented DVT before filter insertion. The recurrent nonfatal PE rate was 3% and symptomatic occlusion of the inferior vena cava (IVC) occurred 4.5% of the time in this study. Major limitations of this study include the retrospective design, the inability to distinguish outcomes in the 21 patients with VCF used as prophylaxis from the 45 others, and unspecified follow-up duration. Jarrell et al.[53] reported a favorable experience with 21 Greenfield filters that were placed in spinal cord-injured patients with documented DVT or PE. Only one PE death occurred in this group, and two instances of IVC thrombus were noted, both of which were well tolerated.
Several reports now exist in the literature on the use of prophylactic vena caval filters in trauma pa-tients.[53-62][64-69][74-78] Six of these studies[55][56][63][64][69] demonstrated a significant reduction in the incidence of PE in their trauma population compared with historical controls. Minimal insertion and short-term complications were reported, with 1-year patency rates ranging from 82% to 96%,[56][58] and 2-year patency rates at 96%56] in prophylactic filters inserted in trauma patients. Moreover, a higher DVT rate was not seen in prophylactic filter patients compared with nonfilter patients.[55][79] A recent follow-up study with a minimum of 5 years in 199 patients showed that the filters were well tolerated. Patients went on to live active lives, with a minimal migration or cava thromboses.[66] Likewise, Greenfield et al.[67] reported on 249 prophylactic VCFs for trauma and noted an incidence of PE in 1.5%, a caval occlusion rate of 3.5%, and good outcome with regard to the mechanical stability of the filter. The authors concluded that the prophylactic VCF placement was associated with a low incidence of adverse outcomes and provided protection from fatal PE. However, none of these studies were Class I studies.
In contrast to the above-mentioned studies, McMurty et al.,[77] in a retrospective review of 299 patients who had prophylactic filters placed over an 8-year period, failed to demonstrate an overall decrease in their trauma population compared with historical controls. This is the only study to date that failed to report a benefit of prophylactic VCFs in high-risk trauma patients. This study only looked at the incidence of PE in their overall trauma population and could have missed a significant decrease of PE in their high-risk population if subset analysis was performed.
The data presented herein would indicate that the risk/benefit ratio is favorable in the high-risk trauma patients. The problem is defining the high-risk patient. In the first section of this review (Risk Factors for Venous Thromboembolism after Trauma), we defined the high-risk patient for DVT, but not necessarily for PE (arguably a more serious complication of VTE). One trauma study[61] identified four injury patterns that accounted for 92% of PEs: spinal cord injury with paraplegia or quadriplegia; severe closed head injury with a GCS score ≤ 8 for > than 48 hours; age > 55 years with isolated long bone fractures; and complex pelvic fractures associated with long bone fractures. This single-institution study may seem at conflict with what was presented in the first section of this review, which showed that on meta-analysis, head injury was not a high-risk factor. It must be noted, however, the meta-analysis dealt only with DVT. Furthermore, this study found those patients who had a GCS score > 8 for greater than 48 hours at greater risk for PE, whereas the meta-analysis did not make such a distinction. This may explain the apparent conflict in head injury as a risk factor after injury. Another retrospective review including 9,721 patients[59] showed that the high-risk categories include head injury plus spinal cord injury, head injury plus long bone fracture, severe pelvic fracture plus long bone fracture, and multiple long bone fractures. These authors estimate that if they had used a prophylactic filter in these 2% of patients, a very dramatic reduction in PE would have been seen. They suggested that patients with an estimated risk of PE of 2% to 5%, despite prophylaxis, are reasonable candidates for prophylactic VCF placement, especially if conventional prophylactic measures cannot be used. Many years of experience with the Greenfield filter indicate that it has a patency rate of about 96%, a recurrent PE rate of 3% to 5%, and a caval penetration rate of about 2%.[79] These complication rates were reasonable, but multiplied over the lifetime of a young patient, these rates could become important. One study indicated a significant amount of chronic venous insufficiency in long-term follow-up of prophylactic filter patients.[62] However, with no nonfilter group to compare with, whether the filter was the cause of this chronic venous insufficiency in this very-high-risk group is not clear.
The more recent literature on this subject of VCFs discusses the bedside placement of filters[68][75][80] and the use of ultrasound as an imaging modality in the placement of filters.68][75][78] These studies showed that filters could be placed safely at the bedside, resulting in a decrease in operating room use and cost. Ashley et al.[78] compared intravascular ultrasonography to contrast venography in 21 trauma patients who had prophylactic VCF placement. The authors noted that contrast venography overestimated the size of the vena cava in all cases (average vena cava diameter was 26.4 ± 3.3 mm by venography vs. 20.6 ± 3.1 mm by intravascular ultrasound). The use of contrast venography presents a significant concern when one notes that a vena cava of greater than 28 mm is a contraindication to the placement of a Greenfield VCF.
More recently, interest and experience have been increasing for the many types of retrievable filters. Much of this early work has been performed in Europe.[81][82] The use of retrievable filters is particularly appealing to trauma surgeons whose patients are at high risk for PE for a relatively short period. Technical problems with the retrievable filters have prevented their widespread application at the present time. Nevertheless, they may have potential in the future. A recent survey of 620 trauma surgeons across the United States revealed that the potential removability of filters would significantly increase (p < 0.01) prophylactic filter placement from 29% to 53%.
Summary
No Class I studies exist to support insertion of a VCF in a trauma patient without an established DVT or PE. A fair amount of Class II and III data that may support VCF use has been accumulated in high-risk trauma patients without a documented occurrence of a DVT or PE. At this time, we recommend consideration of IVC filter insertion in patients without a documented DVT or PE who meet high-risk criteria and cannot be anticoagulated.
Future Investigation
Important unresolved issues with regard to filter use in trauma patients include the following:
- Do VCFs significantly reduce the incidence of clinically important PE in patients who receive optimal prophylaxis?
- If so, can a group of patients be identified who have a high failure rate with optimal prophylaxis?
- What are the short-term and long-term complications of VCF insertion used as primary prophylaxis in trauma patients?
- Is VCF insertion cost-effective?
- Do temporary VCFs have a role in trauma patients whose risk of PE may be high for only a short time?
Acknowledgment
We thank Jody Ciano for her help in the preparation of this article.
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Table
Title
First Author |
Year |
Reference Title |
Class |
Conclusion |
Webb LX |
1992 |
Greenfield filter prophylaxis of pulmonary embolism in patients undergoing surgery for acetabular fracture. J Orthop Trauma. 6:139–145 |
II |
Outlined predisposing factors for VTE. In patients undergoing acetabular fracture repair with 2 or more risk factors, prophylactic filter was placed (24/51). No insertion complications and no PEs. 4 patients had leg edema and 1 had phlegmasia. 27 patients did not receive preoperative filter; 2 PEs in this group, 1 fatal. All patients had SQ heparin and aspirin.
|
Jarrell BE |
1983 |
A new method of management using the Kim-Ray Greenfield filter for deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism in spinal cord injury. Surg Gynecol Obstet. 157:316–320 |
III |
21 SCI patients with filter placed for “traditional” indications. 1 death secondary to PE in filter patients secondary to misplacement in right iliac vein. 2 thrombosed IVCs. Overall DVT rate in SCI population 62%. Emphasis on knowing exact location of DVT, anatomy of IVC, that filter must protect from all sources of emboli in lower extremity, and that there is a risk of thrombosis through large collateral vessels.
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Cipolle M |
1995 |
Prophylactic vena caval filters reduce pulmonary embolism in trauma patients [abstract]. Crit Care Med. 23:A93. |
III |
Review of 43 high-risk trauma patients who had VCFs placed, 16 for traditional indications and 27 for prophylaxis. 0 PEs in prophylactic group and 5 PEs in traditional indications group. Overall PE rate was 11.6%.
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Rodriguez JL |
1996 |
Early placement of prophylactic vena cava filters in injured patients at high-risk for pulmonary embolism. J Trauma. 40:797–804 |
II |
40 VCFs placed in consecutive patients with 3 or more risk factors compared to 80 matched historic controls. 1 PE in VCF group, 14 PEs in non-VCF group. PE-related mortality and overall mortality was the same in each group, as was the incidence of DVT, 15% in VCF group and 19% in no-VCF group.
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Rogers FB |
1995 |
Routine prophylactic vena cava filter insertion in severely injured trauma patients decreases the incidence of pulmonary embolism. J Am Coll Surg. 180:641–647 |
II |
Continued follow-up from J Trauma 1993. 63 prophylactic VCFs placed in high-risk patients as previously outlined. DVT rate: 30%, 1 PE (fatal). No insertion complications, 3.5% insertion-related thromboses. 30-day patency, 100% (n = 36); 1 year, 96% (n = 34); 2 year, 96% (n = 16).
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Rosenthal D |
1994 |
Use of the Greenfield filter in patients with major trauma. Cardiovasc Surg. 2:52–55 |
II |
Control group 1984–88, 94 patients with 22 PEs (23%) and 5% fatal PE rate. 1988–92, after adoption of protocol to place prophylactic filters, 67 patients with only 1 PE and no fatal PEs. Minimal insertion morbidity. No long-term follow-up reported.
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Wilson JT |
1994 |
Prophylactic vena cava filter insertion in patients with traumatic spinal cord injury: preliminary results. Neurosurgery. 35:234–239 |
II |
Retrospective analysis of 111 SCI patients showed 7 PEs (6.3%) accounting for 31% of trauma PEs. 6 PEs occurred after patient discharge, mean time 78 days (9–5,993). 15 prophylactic filters placed in SCI patients. No insertion problems or PEs. 30-day patency rate, 100% (n = 14); 1-year, 82% (n = 9).
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Winchell RJ |
1994 |
Risk factors associated with pulmonary embolism despite routine prophylaxis: implications for improved protection. J Trauma. 37:600–606 |
III |
8-year retrospective registry review at Level I trauma center (9,721 patients). Overall PE rate, 37%. 29 prophylactic VCFs placed with no PEs or short-term complications. Average time to PE in this group was 14.5 days. High-risk categories: head + spinal cord injury (4.5%); head + long bone fracture (8.8%); severe pelvis + long bone fracture (12%); multiple long bone fractures (10%). Patients with estimated risk of PE, despite prophylaxis of > 2–5%, are reasonable candidates for prophylactic VCF placement, especially if conventional measures cannot be used.
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Zolfaghari D |
1995 |
Expanded use of inferior vena cava filters in the trauma population. Surg Annu. 27:99–105 |
III |
Retrospective analysis of 45 filters placed in 3,005 patients. 38/45 had extended indications for filter placement as they were placed for no DVT or in patients with DVT or PE but no contraindication to anticoagulation. No PEs after filter placement, and there was 1 death secondary to closed head injury.
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Rogers FB |
1993 |
Prophylactic vena cava filter insertion in severely injured trauma patients: indications and preliminary results. J Trauma. 35:637–642 |
II |
Prospective criteria for prophylactic filter insertion after retrospective review of trauma registry. Prophylactic filters placed in patients who could not receive anticoagulation and grouped: (1) age > 55 with long bone fracture; (2) severe closed head injury and coma; (3) multiple long bone fractures and pelvic fractures; (4) spinal cord injury. 34 patients had prophylactic filters placed. No PEs, 17.6% DVT rate. 30-day patency, 100%; 1-year patency, 89% (n = 17).
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Patton JH Jr |
1996 |
Prophylactic Greenfield filter: acute complications and long-term follow-up. J Trauma. 41:231–237 |
II |
Follow-up of prophylactic filters placed between 1991 and 1994. 69 filters with 9% insertion rate. 15 patients died. 30 patients were located and 19 returned for follow-up evaluation (35%). Average follow-up was 770 days (246–1,255). No caval thrombosis. 14 patients had chronic DVT. 11/14 had chronic venous insufficiency. No long-term caval thromboses. Not clear, however, whether filter caused chronic venous insufficiency because there was no nonfilter group.
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Leach TA |
1994 |
Surgical prophylaxis for pulmonary embolism. Am Surg. 16:292–295 |
II |
205 VCFs placed for indications that were outlined prospectively, although many were inserted for “traditional” indications. No PEs in these filters, patients, and minimal insertion complications. |
Khansarinia S |
1995 |
Prophylactic Greenfield filter placement in selected high-risk trauma patients. J Vasc Surg. 22:235–236 |
I |
108 filters placed in high-risk trauma patients over a 2-year period with injury-matched controls who did not receive a filter. PEs in filter group vs. 13 PEs in control group, 9 of which were fatal. The differences were significant for both PE (p ? 0.009) and PE-related death (p ? 0.03). |
Gosin JS |
1997 |
Efficacy of prophylactic vena cava filters in high-risk trauma patients. Ann Vasc Surg. 11:100–105 |
II |
99 prophylactic filters placed in high-risk trauma population over 2- year period. This decreased PEs in trauma populatin to 1.6% from 4.8% in historical controls (p ? 0.045 Fisher’s exact). |
Sekharan J |
2001 |
Long term follow up prophylactic Greenfield filters in multisystem trauma patients. J Trauma. 51:1087– 1091 |
III |
5-year follow-up study of 199 patients showed that filters are well- tolerated in trauma patients, with minimal migration on caval thrombosis. |
Greenfield LJ |
2000 |
Prophylactic vena cava filters in trauma: the rest of the story. J Vasc Surg. 32:490–495 |
II |
249 patients had prophylactic filters and prospectively followed. Caval occlusion rate was 3.5% and new PE was 1.5%. Authors concluded that prophylactic VCF was associated with low adverse outcome rate while protecting from fatal PE. |
Van Natta TL |
1998 |
Elective bedside surgery in critically injured patients is safe and cost effective. Ann Surg. 227:618–624 |
III |
71 ICU filters placed at bedside in the ICU in trauma patients under ultrasound guidance. No complications associated with IVC filter placement. Decreased cost and OR use. |
Langan EM 3rd |
1999 |
Prophylactic inferior vena cava filters in trauma patients at high-risk: follow-up examination and risk/benefit assessment. J Vasc Surg. 30:484–488 |
III |
160 prophylactic filters inserted: 75 (45%) returned for follow-up, a mean of 19.4 mo (range, 7–60 mo) after insertion. 93% patiency of vena cava on follow-up ultrasound; 13.3% had DVT with one nonfatal PE. Filter insertion complications occurred in 3 (1.6%) patients including one groin hematoma, one A-V fistula, and one misplacement in common iliac vein. |
Velmahos GC |
2000 |
Prevention of venous thromboembolism after trauma: an evidence-based report—part II: analysis of risk factors and evaluation of the role of vena cava filters. J Trauma. 49:140–144 |
I |
Meta-analysis of literature on prophylactic vena cava filters. Patients with prophylactic vena cava filters had a lower incidence of PE (0.2%) compared with those without filters (1.5%) vs. historical controls (5.8%). |
Greenfield LJ |
1988 |
Twelve-year clinical experience with the Greenfield vena cava filter. Surgery. 104:706–712 |
III |
Long-term follow-up of 469 patients with mean follow-up of 43 months (0.3–138) from 1974–1986. 81 filters placed for “extended” indications (17%), 40 trauma patients included in follow-up. 96% IVC patency, 98% filter patency rate, 4% misplacement rate, 3% recurrent PE rate. |
Golueke PJ |
1988 |
Interruption of the vena cava by means of the Greenfield filter: expanding the indications. Surgery. 103:111–117 |
III |
16 filters inserted prophylactically before joint replacement surgery in patients with history of VTE. 72 filters inserted for “traditional” indications. Mean follow-up, 16.4 mo (range 1–60 mo) in 65 patients. Complications: 3% recurrent PE, 9% leg edema, 7.5% caval occlusion 92.5% patency. No PEs in prophylactic group that received antiplatelet and pneumatic compression therapy. Indications should be extended for VCFs to help reduce preventable deaths secondary to PE. |
Rohrer MJ |
1989 |
Extended indications for placement of inferior vena cava filters. J Vasc Surg. 10:44–50 |
III |
264 filters placed in all types of patients. 66 placed prophylactically. “Extended” indications: (1) no documented DVT but high risk; (2) small PE would be fatal because of poor cardiopulmonary reserve; (3) large ileofemoral thrombus; (4) procedure in conjunction with venous thrombectomy; (5) thrombus above previously placed IVC filter. No deaths in either group. Prophylactic group had minimal morbidity. 3 PEs (4.5%) despite filter, 1 mortality, and 4.5% occlusion. Recommend liberalizing indications for insertion of Greenfield filter since they had an insertion mortality rate of 0% and fatal PE rate of 1.5% in high-risk prophylactic group. |
Ferris EJ |
1993 |
Percutaneous inferior vena cava filters: follow-up of seven designs in 320 patients. Radiology. 188:851– 856 |
III |
324 filters placed over 7 yr. No placement-related mortality or morbidity. Average follow-up, 404 days (1–2,392). 19% caval thrombosis; 9% delayed penetration through IVC wall; 6% migration more than 1 cm, 2% fracture strut. Insertion site DVT was 2%. Long-term radiologic follow-up recommended for IVC filters. |
Nunn CR |
1997 |
Cost-effective method for bedside insertion of vena cava filters in trauma patients. J Trauma. 45:752–758 |
III |
Ultrasound-guided IVC filter insertion in 55 trauma patients. 49 successful; 6 failed. |
Headrick JR |
1997 |
The role of ultrasonography and inferior vena cava filter placement in high-risk trauma patients. Am Surg. 63:1–8 |
II |
228 high-risk patients were followed with serial ultrasound. 39 (17%) developed DVT with 29 undergoing immediate IVC filter placement. Decreased incidence of PE compared with historical controls. |
McMurtry AL |
1999 |
Increase use of prophylactic vena cava filters in trauma patients failed to decrease overall incidence of pulmonary embolism. J Am Coll Surg. 189:314–320 |
III |
Review of 299 patients with prophylactic filters over an 8-yr period, yielded no demonstrable decrease in PE incidence compared with historical controls. |
Ashley DW |
2001 |
Accurate deployment of vena cava filters: comparison of intravascular ultrasound and contrast venography. J Trauma. 50:975–981 |
III |
21 patients had VCF placed via intravascular ultrasound in the OR, followed by contrast venography. In four cases, contrast venography missed “best location” by 3 mm or more. Contrast venography overestimated vena cava diameter on average (24.4 : 3.3 mm venography vs. 20.6 : 3.1 mm intravascular ultrasound; p < 0.0001).
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Greenfield LJ |
1996 |
Posttrauma thromboembolism prophylaxis. 8th Annual American Venous Forum |
I |
Pilot study for large, multicenter trial. 53 patients randomized to receive PCD, LMWH, or unfractionated heparin and 1/2 randomized to receive VCF. Inclusion criteria were ISS > 9 and VTE risk factor score developed by investigators. 26 patients got VCF. No complications of filter placement or evidence of vena caval occlusion. No PEs in either group. 12 DVTs in nonfilter patients and 11 DVTs in filter patients.
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Tola JC |
1999 |
Bedside placement of inferior vena cava filters in the intensive care unit. Am Surg. 65:833–837 |
III |
25 patients underwent prophylactic IVC filters in the ICU with digital C-arm with no postoperative or intraoperative complications. Average saving of $1,844 when filters were placed in ICU vs. OR.
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Lorch H |
2000 |
Current practice of temporary vena cava filter insertion: a multicenter registry. J Vasc Interv Radiol. 11:83–88 |
III |
188 patients (Antheor filter, 54%; Guenther filter, 26%; Prolyser filter, 18%). 4 patients died of PE. 16% filter thrombosis; filter dislodgement, 4.8%.
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Neuerburg JM |
1997 |
Results of a multicenter study of the retrievable tulip vena cava filter: early clinical experience. Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol. 20:10–16 |
III |
83 patients implanted with retrievable Tulip filter; 3 filter insertion problems, 1 fatal recurrent PE; 2 nonfatal PEs; 8 caval occlusions.
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