Does screening for factor V Leiden and extending anticoagulation for 2 years improve clinical outcomes and cost-effectiveness in patients with a first episode of DVT?
Screening for factor V Leiden and extending anticoagulation to 2 years is cost-effective after a first DVT, especially for idiopathic cases compliant with warfarin.
There is much debate over the appropriateness of prescribing prolonged anticoagulation to heterozygous carriers of factor V Leiden suffering a first episode of deep vein thrombosis (DVT). We, thus used meta-analysis to estimate from six eligible studies the summary odds-ratio of recurrent DVT in carriers of factor V Leiden versus non-carriers: 1. 36 (CI, 1. 05-1. 78). After that, we used a decision model to compare lifelong costs and benefits of 6 months standard anticoagulation with those of screening for carriers of factor V Leiden and extending for 2 years their anticoagulation. Screening was a cost-effective strategy, since it provided 2 additional quality-adjusted days of life per patient at the cost of 12, 833 per quality-adjusted year of life saved, as compared to standard management. However, screening was not cost-effective in patients who were predicted to incur fatal bleeding at a rate higher than 0. 34% per year or recurrent DVT at a rate lower than 9% in the first 2 years. The screening policy was cost-saving if restricted to patients with idiopathic DVT and compliant to warfarin therapy.
Pistorio et al. (Sat,) studied this question.