A multi-institutional registry of pediatric hospital-acquired thrombosis cases: The Children's Hospital-Acquired Thrombosis (CHAT) project

Pediatric hospital-acquired venous thromboembolism (HA-VTE) rates have increased dramatically. To achieve generalizable knowledge in the derivation and validation of HA-VTE risk factors and risk prediction models and inform future risk-stratified prevention strategies, multi-institutional studies ar...

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Published inThrombosis research Vol. 161; pp. 67 - 72
Main Authors Jaffray, Julie, Mahajerin, Arash, Young, Guy, Goldenberg, Neil, Ji, Lingyun, Sposto, Richard, Stillings, Amy, Krava, Emily, Branchford, Brian
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Ltd 01.01.2018
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Summary:Pediatric hospital-acquired venous thromboembolism (HA-VTE) rates have increased dramatically. To achieve generalizable knowledge in the derivation and validation of HA-VTE risk factors and risk prediction models and inform future risk-stratified prevention strategies, multi-institutional studies are needed. This paper presents an investigator-initiated, multicenter pediatric case-cohort study designed to identify risk factors for HA-VTE to create a HA-VTE risk prediction model. A registry, which houses pertinent variables from HA-VTE subjects and non-HA-VTE controls, was created for the Children's Hospital-Acquired Thrombosis (CHAT) study. Specific variables from the registry associated with HA-VTE risk will be identified using multivariable regression to create a pediatric HA-VTE risk prediction model to be prospectively validated. Seven large pediatric institutions have entered over 600 HA-VTE subjects aged 0–21years of age into the registry. Subjects showed a male predominance (57%), a median age of three years (IQR 0.3–13) and were most likely admitted to an intensive care unit (57%) at VTE diagnosis. Median time to HA-VTE was 10days after admission. The most prevalent risk factors include central venous catheters (80%), surgery (43%), systemic steroids (31%), congenital heart disease (27%), infection (14%) and cancer (13%). CHAT, with its creation of a risk prediction model with prospective validation using the CHAT registry, is a novel study design and will be the first step in identifying safe and effective strategies to decrease HA-VTE in children by helping define the highest risk population for initial, or more aggressive, thromboprophylaxis efforts. •Hospital-acquired pediatric venous thromboembolism incidence is increasing.•A registry of pediatric HA-VTE cases was created to identify VTE risk factors.•The most prevalent risk factor is the presence of a central venous catheter.•A HA-VTE risk prediction model will be created and validated.
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ISSN:0049-3848
1879-2472
1879-2472
DOI:10.1016/j.thromres.2017.11.019