Associate Professor Frank Firkin and Associate Professor Harshal Nandurkar, authors of the article, comment:
The purpose of the article was to discuss the relative degrees of risk conferred by in-flight and pre-existing medical factors. Prophylactic measures for patients at high risk, including those with a history of venous thrombosis, were discussed in the article.
The question of management of a patient with newly diagnosed venous thrombosis on therapy in relation to taking flights is a different issue. Dr Goh raises the issue of the extent to which early mobilisation confers risk despite administration of standard therapy for deep vein thrombosis. Various factors may play a part, including physical limitations imposed by the impact of the thrombus on venous return, sequelae of pulmonary emboli and imaging results that raise concerns about thrombus stability.
More pertinent issues relate to the period in which there is an increased risk of venous thrombosis following the onset of deep vein thrombosis, amounting to many weeks, and thus delayed diagnosis and suboptimal therapy are disadvantageous. This enhanced risk is normally suppressed by appropriate treatment with low molecular weight heparin and warfarin, and regular monitoring to ensure the INR is maintained.