Non Hodgkin’s Lymphoma (NHL) and Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT): A Dangerous Liaison Still Unexplored.

2007 
Introduction DVT incidence ranges from 3 to 15% in cancer patient. Nevertheless there are only few data about DVT in lymphoma. Aim of our study is to define the real DVT risk and incidence in lymphoma patients. Patients and Methods Our study is a retrospective study including patients of two haematology centers. We considered the age of the patients, sex, histological type of lymphoma (indolent -IL- vs aggressive -AL), localization over or under diaphragm, extranodal localizations, vascular compression, stage of disease, IPI, LDH level, chemotherapy type and timing of administration (weekly vs every 2wks or 3 weeks), the use of chemotherapy regimen containing methotrexate as potential risk factors in DVT onset. Data regarding 567 NHL patients, observed from 2001 to 2006, were collected. 400 patients had indolent NHL (IL) and 167 Aggressive NHL (AL). Median age was 59 years (R 13–94), M/F ratio was 300/267. DVT was diagnosed by ultrasound or CT scan. The statistical analysis was conducted with Yates corrected chi square test, Odds Ratio (OR), Log-rank test (to compare Kaplan-Meier curves). Results 87 patients (15%) showed DVT. Of these, 37(43%) were localized at legs and 19(22%) involved abdominal veins (especially iliac veins, 10% of total). DVT onset median time was 3 months from NHL diagnosis (Range 0–156 months). Sex, histological type of lymphoma (IL vs AL), localization over or under diaphragm, extranodal localization, stage of disease, IPI, LDH level, and use of chemotherapy regimen containing methotrexate were not related to an increased risk to develop DVT. Vascular compression was the most significant risk factor for DVT development with OR 3.1 (CI95%:1.9–5), Chi Square22.7(p
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    1
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []