Key Points
Adults with SCD have an increased incidence of VTE, but similar data in children are lacking.
In this 7-year, multicenter retrospective study, 1.7% of children with SCD developed VTE.
Abstract
A hypercoagulable state resulting in increased venous thromboembolism (VTE) has been described in adults with sickle cell disease (SCD), but similar data for children are lacking. The objective of this retrospective cohort study was to describe the rate of VTE and risk factors associated with VTE in children with SCD across tertiary-care children’s hospitals in the United States between the years 2009 and 2015. We used the Pediatric Health Information System database to investigate all pediatric patients with SCD admitted to 1 of 48 participating institutions between 1 January 2009 and 30 September 2015. International Classification of Disease, Ninth Edition, Clinical Modification codes were used to identify index thromboembolic events and chronic medical conditions known to be associated with VTE. Billing codes were used to identify central venous line (CVL) placement and pharmaceutical billing codes to identify estrogen containing oral-contraceptive use. Logistic regression analysis was used to study the association among unique patient characteristics, VTE, and death. 10 454 eligible subjects with SCD were identified. Median age (±interquartile range) of study cohort was 10 (±11) years. 181 subjects (1.7%) developed an index venous thromboembolic event during the study period. Median age at VTE diagnosis was 15.9 (±7.4) years. On multivariable logistic regression analysis, CVL placement, chronic renal disease, history of stroke, female sex, length of hospitalization, intensive care unit utilization, and older age were associated with VTE. After adjusting for other variables, VTE was independently associated with death. In summary, VTE can occur in pediatric patients with SCD. CVL placement is a modifiable risk factor for VTE development.
Introduction
Sickle cell disease (SCD) occurs secondary to homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations in the β-globin chain. The resulting valine to glutamic substitution at position 6 results in production of hemoglobin S (HbS),1 which polymerizes in a concentration-dependent manner under conditions of hypoxia, resulting in symptoms of vaso-occlusion. In the United States, ∼100 000 to 140 000 individuals are affected by this condition.2
A hypercoagulable state resulting in increased venous thromboembolism (VTE) has been well-described in adult patients with SCD.3 Nearly a quarter of adults with SCD have a history of VTE.4 Additionally, VTE is associated with a two- to fourfold increased risk of death in adults with SCD.4,5 Etiology of this hypercoagulability in SCD includes both “traditional” and “sickle-cell specific” risk factors.3 Traditional risk factors for VTE include placement of central venous lines (CVL), frequent hospitalization, and immobilization for pain crisis and need for surgery.6-9 Sickle cell–specific risk factors include platelet activation, chronic activation of coagulation secondary to externalization of the highly procoagulant phosphatidylserine on the sickled red blood cells, increased expression of tissue factor on circulating monocytes, and acquired deficiency of natural anticoagulants (proteins S and C).10-15
Previously, we reported a single-institution retrospective study of 414 pediatric patients (≤21 years) with SCD followed at Nationwide Children’s Hospital between 2009 and 2015.16 Cumulative incidence of VTE was found to be 2.9% (12/414). Nine of the 12 VTE were CVL associated. On multivariable analysis, the presence of a CVL was identified as an independent risk factor for thrombosis (odds ratio [OR] [±95% confidence interval (CI)], 33.8 [8.7-130.9]). The primary objective of the current multicenter cohort study was to review the rate of VTE in pediatric subjects with SCD across 48 tertiary-care children’s hospitals in the United States over a 7-year period (2009-2015). Additionally, we investigated the risk factors associated with VTE in this cohort.
Methods
Data source
This retrospective, multicenter cohort study was deemed to be exempt by the Institutional Review Board at Nationwide Children’s Hospital. Administrative approval was obtained through the Children’s Hospital Association (Overland Park, KS). Data for this study was obtained from the Pediatric Health Information System (PHIS), an administrative database that contains data from inpatient, ambulatory surgery, emergency department, and observation encounters for 48 tertiary-care children’s hospitals in the United States.17,18 Participating centers are heterogeneous for bed number, daily census, and geographic location. Data reliability and quality are assured through a joint effort between the participating hospitals and the Children’s Hospital Association.19,20 Data are deidentified at the time of submission and subject to a number of validity and reliability checks before being included in the dataset. For the purpose of this study, data from all 48 participating hospitals were included.
Study population
International Classification of Disease, Ninth Edition, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) codes were used to identify subjects. Eligible subjects were ≤21 years of age (at last encounter), were admitted to one of the participating PHIS hospitals between 1 January 2009 and 30 September 2015 and had at least 2-SCD specific ICD-9-CM discharge codes (Table 1). Subjects who underwent hematopoietic stem cell transplant during the course of the study were excluded from the analysis. Baseline demographic variables including patient age, sickle cell genotype, sex, race/ethnicity, and mortality were abstracted. Venous thromboembolic events during the study period were identified using ICD-9-CM codes. Superficial vein thromboses (ICD-9-CM 451.0) were not considered to be VTE events. For patients with multiple hospitalizations with VTE codes, only the first thromboembolic event was included in the analysis.
Billing codes were used to identify CVL placement,21 and pharmaceutical billing codes were used to identify estrogen-containing oral contraceptive use. Chronic medical conditions known to be associated with VTE (namely, congenital heart disease, inflammatory bowel disease, renal disease [including nephrotic syndrome], and history of cancer [leukemia, brain and renal tumors], stroke, and obesity) were also identified using ICD-9-CM codes (Table 1).22-26 A diagnosis of these conditions was included in the analysis only if the subject had 2 disease-specific codes during the study period (eg, leukemia would only be included in the analysis if the subject had 2 ICD-9-CM codes specific for leukemia documented during the study period). To investigate age as a risk factor for VTE, we compared age at VTE (for patients with a history of thrombosis) to age at censoring (for those who did not develop VTE). Similarly, to assess the impact of “length of hospital stay” and “intensive care unit (ICU) utilization” on development of VTE, the hospital admission during which the VTE occurred (for patients with a history of thrombosis) was compared with last admission (for those without VTE).
Statistical analysis
Standard statistical methods were used to summarize the variables (frequency and percent for categorical parameters and mean [±standard deviation (SD)], median, and range for ordinal or continuous scaled parameters). Multivariable logistic regression models were fit using stepwise and backward variable selection methods to identify unique patient characteristics associated with VTE. Similarly, logistic regression analysis was used to investigate the association between VTE and death after adjusting for cancer, renal disease, stroke, congenital heart disease, and inflammatory bowel disease. Due to the low event rate of VTE, logistic regression models were corrected using the Firth method.27 Associations were summarized by calculating ORs and corresponding 95% CIs. To assess the correlation between number of CVLs placed and number of SCD patients encountered per hospital, Pearson correlation coefficients were used. Analyses were performed using SAS version 9.3 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC). All calculated P values were 2 sided, and P < .05 was considered statistically significant.
Results
A total of 10 454 eligible subjects with SCD (5030 females) underwent 67 122 admissions between 1 January 2009 and 30 September 2015 (median, 4 admissions/patient; range, 2-101 admissions). Median age (±interquartile range [IQR]) at last encounter during study period was 10 (±11) years. Baseline demographic information is elaborated in Table 2. During the study period, 1987 CVLs were placed in 1522 subjects (458 peripherally inserted central catheters [PICCs], 349 tunneled externalized catheters [eg, Broviac and Hickman catheters], 353 totally implantable catheters [eg, mediports and portacaths], and 827 unspecified catheters [including dialysis catheters and jugular and femoral vein catheters]).21
One hundred eighty one subjects (1.7%) developed an index venous thromboembolic event during the study period. One hundred thirty six out of 181 subjects (75.1%) had HbSS genotype, 14 (7.7%) had HbS-β thalassemia genotype, 16 (8.8%) had HbSC genotype, and 15 (8.3%) were unspecified. Median age (±IQR) at VTE diagnosis was 15.9 (±7.4) years. Forty three out of 181 (23.8%) subjects had a pulmonary embolism code at diagnosis. Median age (range) of this subcohort was 18.4 (±4.1) years. Ninety seven out of 1522 patients (6.4%) who underwent a CVL placement developed a thromboembolic event (23/97 patients with CVL-associated VTE had an additional pulmonary embolism diagnosis code). Median (range) time interval between the most recent CVL placement and VTE development was 4 weeks (same admission, 4.2 years).
Results of univariate and multivariable logistic regression analysis investigating the association of CVL placement, sickle cell genotype, length of hospitalization, ICU utilization, chronic medical conditions, and VTE are elaborated in Table 3. In summary, on multivariable logistic regression analysis, any catheter placement (OR [95% CI], P = 3.47 [2.49-4.83], P < .0001), chronic renal disease (4.32 [1.69-11.07], P = .0023), history of stroke (2.19 [1.45-3.21], P < .0001), female sex (1.60 [1.17-2.20], P = .0035), ICU utilization (3.16 [2.13-4.69], P < .0001), older age (1.08 [1.05-1.11], P < .0001), and length of hospitalization (1.05 [1.04-1.06], P < .0001) were associated with VTE.
Of note, subjects with VTE had a median of 8.5 hospitalizations during the study period (compared with a median of 4 hospitalizations for those without VTE [P < .0001]). Fifty-seven of the 181 thromboembolic admissions (31.5%) had a simultaneous code for ICU admission. Thirty-nine subjects died during the study period, and 5 of these subjects (12.8%) encountered a thromboembolic event prior to death. Four out of 5 deaths occurred during the same admission as VTE diagnosis, and 1 death occurred shortly after (<1 month) the VTE diagnosis. After adjusting for underlying comorbid conditions, VTE was independently associated with death (OR [95% CI]; P = 8.95 [3.55-22.56]; P < .0001).
Lastly, given that CVL placement was a strong predictor of VTE development, we investigated interhospital variability between CVL placement and VTE development. After excluding 10 hospitals that admitted <75 patients with SCD throughout the study period, we did not identify a significant, positive correlation between CVLs placed per 1000 patient encounters and VTEs per 1000 SCD patients (r = −0.01, P = .97).
Discussion
In this retrospective, multicenter PHIS study, over a 7-year period, nearly 2% of patients with SCD developed VTE. CVL placement, chronic renal disease, history of stroke, female sex, length of hospitalization, ICU utilization, and older age were all independently associated with VTE development. When comparing our results to other administrative database studies, the rate of VTE in children with SCD was found to be lower than the rate of VTE in pediatric cancer patients (5%),26 comparable to VTE rate in children with congenital heart disease undergoing cardiac surgery (2.7%),28 but higher than the VTE rate in children with trauma and lower-extremity fractures (0.05% to 0.2%).29,30 The current work supports our recent, single-institution study, where the cumulative incidence of VTE in children with SCD followed at Nationwide Children’s Hospital was estimated to be 2.9%,16 and it adds to a growing body of literature.
Thromboembolism is thought to be common in adults with SCD. In the largest study of VTE in SCD, Paul Stein and colleagues evaluated 1 804 000 SCD admissions between 1979 and 2003, using the National Hospital Discharge Survey. They estimated the prevalence of PE to be 3.5 times higher in patients <40 years of age with SCD than in African American controls.31 Although the prevalence of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) was similar in both cohorts, patients with SCD and DVT were significantly younger than controls (31 years vs 54 years). In a single-institution, cross-sectional study by Rakhi Naik and colleagues, 25% (101/404) patients with SCD had a history of VTE, with a median age of diagnosis of 29.9 years.4 After adjusting for multiple variables, non–catheter-related VTE was associated with a 3.6-fold increased hazard ratio (HR) of death. The same group subsequently used data from the Cooperative Study of Sickle Cell Disease to estimate incidence rate for first VTE.5 They studied 1523 SCD patients ≥15 years of age and estimated the cumulative incidence of VTE by 40 years of age to be 11.3% (95% CI, 8.3-15.3). Individuals with HbSS/Sβ0 had the highest incidence of VTE; additionally, SCD patients with VTE had a 2.3-fold increased HR of death as compared with those in whom thromboembolism did not develop. Ann Brunson and colleagues retrospectively evaluated 6237 patients with SCD using the Patient Discharge Database for the State of California.32 By 40 years of age, the cumulative incidence of VTE was 12.5% (95% CI, 11.5-13.6). Additionally, VTE was associated with a 2.9-fold increased HR of death. In summary, adult studies have consistently demonstrated an 11% to 12% cumulative incidence of VTE in patients with SCD by 40 years of age, in addition to reporting a significant association between thromboembolism and death.
In stark contrast to adult literature, pediatric data on SCD and VTE are largely limited to case reports33,34 and case series investigating the risk of CVL placement in children with SCD.6,35,36 The first attempt to systematically study VTE in pediatric patients with SCD was made by Tiago de Oliveira Boechat and colleagues in 2015.37 They performed a retrospective study of 1063 patients followed at the State Institute of Hematology of Rio de Janeiro between the years 2000-2012.37 Twenty subjects (1.8%) underwent CVL placement (usually for acute management of sepsis and acute chest syndrome). Two subjects (0.2%; median age: 6 years) developed DVT after placement of femoral lines (median duration of CVL: 5 days) for management of acute chest syndrome. The difference in the VTE rate between the State Institute of Hematology of Rio de Janeiro and PHIS datasets are likely secondary to increased CVL placement in the institutions included in the PHIS study (1.8% vs 14.5%, respectively). Since the publication of the stroke prevention (STOP) trial in 1998,38 chronic transfusions have become the standard of care for children with SCD and abnormal transcranial Doppler results. Nearly 20% of pediatric SCD patients in the United States are on chronic transfusion therapy.39 Iron overload, the inevitable consequence of chronic transfusion therapy, may be prevented by erythrocytapheresis.40,41 We hypothesize that increased use of erythrocytapheresis in children with SCD managed in tertiary care centers in the United States has required increased placement of CVLs and consequently greater thrombosis risk.
The rate of PE observed in our cohort (24%) was higher than the PE rate previously reported in a PHIS study investigating the epidemiology of VTE in an unselected cohort of children (11%).42 A high prevalence of PE in patients with SCD or SC trait has been previously noted in adult studies,43-45 and is hypothesized to result from in situ pulmonary artery thrombosis. Interestingly, even though the majority of thrombotic events occurred in the setting of CVLs, VTE was associated with an increased HR of death. CVL placement is often required in children with SCD who have additional comorbidities, such as history of stroke, abnormal transcranial Doppler findings, recurrent vaso-occlusive crisis, and acute chest syndrome, possibly indicating a severe sickle cell phenotype. The fact that subjects with VTE had significantly greater number of admissions over the study period (median of 8.5 admissions vs 4 admissions for those without VTE) lends support to this hypothesis.
The current work represents the largest VTE study in pediatric patients with SCD. Limitations of the current study include use of an administrative database, which relies on accurate documentation of diagnosis using ICD-9-CM codes. Also, given limitations of ICD-9-CM coding, we were unable to distinguish patients with HbS-β0 thalassemia from those with HbS-β+ thalassemia, even though both conditions have very different phenotypes. Patients were eligible only if they had 2 disease-specific ICD-9-CM codes, whereas this may have excluded some patients with SCD/chronic medical conditions, we believe this was important to ensure validity of the data. Additionally, we only investigated inpatient data, because we thought it was very unlikely for a pediatric patient with SCD and VTE to be managed on an outpatient basis. It was difficult to determine a temporal relationship between CVL placement/chronic medical condition development and VTE, and therefore, this study documents association between these factors and not causality. It was also technically challenging to estimate how many CVLs were placed for acute indications vs chronic conditions. We only studied patients between the years 2009 and 2015; it is possible that several patients who developed VTE before 2009 were missed. The study therefore documents the VTE rate over a specified period of time and not the cumulative prevalence of VTE in children with SCD. A prospective study is needed to confirm our findings, but this would be hard to accomplish. Because there was significant overlap between CVL billing codes, we were unable to confidently investigate the impact of CVL subtype of VTE development. We were also unable to assess the duration/complications of anticoagulation since the PHIS pharmacy data does not differentiate between therapeutic and prophylactic anticoagulation use. Lastly, our data, though generalizable to academic tertiary care pediatric centers, may not be representative of nonfreestanding hospitals.
In summary, our findings document that VTE can occur in children with SCD, particularly adolescents and young adults. In addition, the VTE diagnosis is associated with an increased HR of death. Lastly, CVL placement was identified as a modifiable risk factor for VTE development. A risk–benefit assessment should be undertaken in every SCD patient before CVL placement, and thrombosis/need for anticoagulation should be discussed as a risk factor. The collection of prospective data, though difficult, would be critical in confirming our findings and eventually to develop a risk prediction model to identify patients at highest risk of VTE, who may benefit from prophylactic anticoagulation.
Presented as an oral abstract at the 58th annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology, San Diego, CA, 3-6 December 2016.
Acknowledgments
R.K. is the recipient of the Hemostasis and Thrombosis Research Society, Mentored Research Award (2016-2018), which was supported by an educational grant from Bioverativ Therapeutics.
Authorship
Contribution: R.K. and J.S. designed the research study, analyzed the data, and wrote the manuscript; and S.C., S.H.O., and A.D. analyzed the data and critically reviewed the manuscript.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Correspondence: Riten Kumar, Nationwide Children’s Hospital, 700 Children’s Dr, Columbus, OH 43205; e-mail: riten.kumar@nationwidechildrens.org.