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izvor podataka: crosbi

An overview of coagulation disorders in cancer patients (CROSBI ID 148928)

Prilog u časopisu | pregledni rad (znanstveni) | međunarodna recenzija

Kvolik, Slavica ; Jukić, Marko ; Matijević, Marko ; Marjanović, Ksenija ; Glavaš-Obrovac, Ljubica An overview of coagulation disorders in cancer patients // Surgical oncology-oxford, 19 (2010), 1; e33-e40. doi: 10.1016/j.suronc.2009.03.008

Podaci o odgovornosti

Kvolik, Slavica ; Jukić, Marko ; Matijević, Marko ; Marjanović, Ksenija ; Glavaš-Obrovac, Ljubica

engleski

An overview of coagulation disorders in cancer patients

A diversity of coagulation disorders in cancer patients arise from tumor-specific growth characteristics, neoangiogenesis with impaired endothelial lining, defective myelopoesis, hypoproteinemia or metastatic lesions growth with organ dysfunction. Recent investigations have found a clinically relevant correlation of coagulation disorders and tumor growth. These prompted new therapeutic strategies focused on growth factors with the aim to control tumor metastasis, particularly if used for the treatment of micrometastatic disease. However, such treatment may lead to the life threatening coagulation imbalance. A coagulation homeostasis may become further impaired after nonsurgical cancer therapy, especially after preoperative irradiation, which produces lesions precipitating both bleeding and thrombosis. Anticancer chemotherapy may affect liver function and decrease the synthesis of both procoagulation and anticoagulation factors. The most of chemotherapeutic protocols affect platelet synthesis, which arises as a principal dose limiting side effect. It was observed both during combined systemic chemotherapy and local antitumor therapy. Although the side effects produced by chemotherapy are reversible, endothelial lesions may persist for many years after the anticancer treatment. Instead of cancer patients, there's a growing cohort of patients with nonmalignant diseases who use cytostatics in the perioperative period, and are candidates for surgical procedures not related to their malignant disease, i.e. hernia repair. In this patient population a special attention must be paid to the preoperative evaluation of coagulation status and thromboprophylaxis. This overview reminds the most common coagulation disorders in cancer patients in the perioperative period. It emphasizes the need for proper patient monitoring which may facilitate the diagnostics and treatment of cancer related coagulation disorders in the perioperative setting.

cancer; neoangiogenesis; chemotherapy; coagulation disorders

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Podaci o izdanju

19 (1)

2010.

e33-e40

objavljeno

0960-7404

10.1016/j.suronc.2009.03.008

Povezanost rada

Kemija, Temeljne medicinske znanosti, Biologija

Poveznice
Indeksiranost