12.5 (8.7) Management Of Bleeding In PC Flashcards

1
Q

Which vessels are the most common sites are bleeding in patients with advanced cancer (list 3)?

A

Carotid, inter-pulmonary, femoral

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2
Q

List 3 broad categories of causes of bleeding in PC and examples

A

Local cause:
- Cancer invasion and destruction

Treatment related causes:
- Chemo, rads, surgery

Systemic causes:
- Coagulopathies: DIC
- Bone marrow failure
- Platelet dysfunction: drugs (ASA, NSAID, warfarin)
- Deficiency in clotting factors: Liver disease, bili obstruction, malabsorption causing

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3
Q

List three nutritional deficiencies that can cause bleeding in PC

A

Vitamin B12
Folate
Vitamin K
Zinc

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4
Q

Name the general approach to bleeding in PC patients (6 steps)

A
  1. Manage size of bleeding - ABC + IV (fluids or blood), O2, vitals + bwk (CBC, type and cross, E7)
  2. Start local measures - pressure, packing, topicals, interventions
  3. Manage (universal) causes of bleeding - stopping blood thinners/give antidotes, TXA, vasopressin, treat coagulopathies
  4. Manage site specific causes of bleeding
  5. Determine place of care
  6. Document and communicate bleeding management plan

Other way of thinking:
- Manage complications - ABC, IV O2 monitor, bloodwork

  • Manage symptoms - transfuse, vasopressin, TXA
  • Manage source:
    Local - pressure, packing
    Systemic - tx coagulopathy, embolize, radiation, surgery
    Iatrogenic - stop blood thinner/give antidote
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5
Q

List five risk factors for bleeding in PC?

A

Thrombocytopenia
Coagulopathy
Anticoagulants

Previous bleeds
Age >50
Diabetes
10-50% loss of body weight

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6
Q

List 3 characteristics of tumors that increase bleeding?

List 3 types of tumors at high risk of bleeding?

A

Tumor close to major vessels (location)
Large tumors (size)
Fungating tumor
Fistulating tumors

Head and neck tumors
Hematological malignancies
GI tumors

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7
Q

What are 3 interventional treatments available for bleeding?

A
  1. Vascular radiology (embolization by vascular IR)
  2. Surgery (removal of bleeding tissue or surgical ligation of bleed vessels; endoscopic procedures; bronchoscopic procedures)
  3. Radiotherapy (external or internal)

FS: IR, rad, surgery/procedure

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8
Q

Vascular embolization by IR:

  1. Embolization materials x 3
  2. Limitations x 2
  3. Pre-requisites x2
  4. SEs x2
A
  1. Particles (polyvinyl alcohol), mechanical device (coil), liquid (glue, alcohol)
  2. Site and extent of tumor infiltration may affect success of embolization; inability to selectively catheterize tumor vasculature
  3. Cross sectional imaging, pre-procedure labs (E7, clotting abnormalities), pt needs to be able to lie flat for 1-2 hours + 2-4 hours of recovery
  4. Puncture site related complications (bruising, bleeding), post embolization syndrome (pain, N/V, ischemia), unintended critical ischemia or end organ damage
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9
Q
  1. When are radiotherapy less effective for bleeding (name 3 circumstances)
  2. When should surgery/procedures be done
A
  1. Anatomical site (some areas are less amenable to rads SEs), radioresponsiveness of tumor, previous exposure to rads
  2. For pts in early stage of disease OR those who have exhausted other options (meds, rads, vascular IR)
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10
Q

When to transfuse plts?

A

<10
<20 + sepsis
<30 + minor bleeding
< 50 + severe bleeding
<100 with intracranial bleeding

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11
Q

When to not transfuse plts - list 2 conditions

A

Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (risk of precipitating clots)

Auto-immune or drug associated immune thrombocytopenia (plt count may not increase due to immune mediated factors)

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12
Q

Fresh frozen plasma -

What does it contain?

When is it indicated? Name 2

A

Contains all soluble plasma protein + clotting factors

Indicated for:
- Correction of major bleeding*
- In preparation for invasive procedures when INR is >2
- Deficiency in multiple coagulation factors (e.g. liver failure, DIC)*

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13
Q

When is Vit K indicated?

What if you can’t wait for Vit K reversal (life threatening bleed, reversal needed <6 hours)?

A

Bleeding due to oral vit K antagonist, liver disease, DIC

Give prothrombin complex concentrate (Octaplex) - which contains vit K dependent coagulation factors (2, 7, 9, 10)

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14
Q

What can you give to reverse the following when life threatening hemorrhage occurs

  • DOACs ?
  • Heparin / LMWH?
A

Idarucizumab (praxbind)

Protamine

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15
Q

TXA:
- What does it do?
- What routes?
- Risk?
- Contraindication?
- How long to continue?
- When to increase dose?

A
  • Antifibrinolytic drugs prevent clot breakdown
  • PO, IV, topical
  • Increase risk of thrombosis
  • CI: DIC
  • Continue 7 days after bleeding is stopped
  • Increase dose if bleeding continues after 3 days
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16
Q

How to manage hematuria?

A

Bladder irrigation/instilation (saline, alum 1%, prostaglanding, formalin)
Radiotherapy
IR - arterial embolization (renal artery)
Surgery - TURP, cystectomy

Note - TXA generally avoided as can increase clots -> ureteric obstruction

17
Q

How to manage UGIB?

A

PPI + ABx + BB + Octreotide (PABO)

TXA
Vasopressin
Thalidomide (reduce VEGF)

Endoscopic hemostasis (injsection of sclerosing agents, thermal, clips, band ligation)

18
Q

How to manage LGIB due to radiation proctitis (can present months to years after pelvic rads)? Name 3 treatments

A

Rectal sucralfate
Rectal steroid enema
Flagyl
hyperbaric O2 tx

19
Q

How to manage hemoptysis?

A

Place patient in lateral decubitus position with bleeding side down

TXA
Vasopressin

Radiotherapy

Therapeutic broncoscopy (balloon tamponade, iced saline lavage, laser therapy, electrocautery)

IR - arterial embolization if above fails

20
Q

How to manage bleeding at nasopharynx versus oropharynx:

A

Nasopharynx:
- Silver nitrate, petroleum jelly
- Electrocautery (anterior bleeds)
- Nasal tampons, ribbon gause, balloons +/- TXA

Oropharynx:
- TXA mouthwash
- Sulcrate mouthwash
- Nebulized adrenaline

IR embolization

21
Q

How to manage vaginal bleeding

A

PO TXA

Vaginal packing

Radiotherapy (bleeding stops 12-48hours of tx)
Surgical ligation of pelvic arteries
IR embolization of pelvic arteries

22
Q

How to manage bleeding malignant wounds

A

Compression

Hemostatic dressing

Silver sticks

Gauze soaked with adrenaline (may cause ischemia/necrosis/rebound vasodilation)

Surgery
Embolization
Chemotherapy

23
Q

List four systemic modalities that can be used to manage bleeding

A

Vitamin K or Octaplex *
Praxbind (DOAC antidote)
Protamine (LMWH antidote)

Antifibrinolytic agents (TXA)*
Vasopressin analogues*
Somatostatin analogues (octreotide)*

Blood/plasma products (plts, FFP, cryoprecipitate)
Recombinant coag factors (VIIa, VIII, IX)

Hyperbaric O2 therapy
Other - pentosanpolysulphate, melatonin, thalidomide

24
Q

List 3 causes of vit k deficiency

A

Decreased intake

Decrease absorption due to Small bowel disease or resection

Decreased absorption due to decreased bile:
Liver disease
Biliary obstruction