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Research
Duration and magnitude of the postoperative risk of venous
thromboembolism in middle aged women: prospective cohort study
Siân Sweetland, statistical epidemiologist1, Jane Green,
clinical epidemiologist1, Bette Liu, senior
research fellow1,4, Amy Berrington de González, investigator1,2, Marianne
Canonico, research associate1,3, Gillian Reeves, statistical
epidemiologist1, Valerie
Beral, professor of epidemiology1, on behalf of the Million Women Study
collaborators
1 Cancer Epidemiology Unit, University of Oxford, Richard Doll Building, Oxford
OX3 7LF, 2 Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer
Institute, Bethesda, MD, USA, 3 Inserm Unit 780, Cardiovascular Epidemiology
Section, Villejuif Cedex, France, 4 The George Institute for International
Health, Sydney NSW, Australia
Correspondence to: V Beral pa.valerie.beral@ceu.ox.ac.ukStephanie
Objective To examine the duration and magnitude of increased
risk of venous thromboembolism after different types of surgery.
Design Prospective cohort study (Million Women Study).
Setting Questionnaire data from the Million Women Study linked
with hospital admission and death records.
Participants 947 454 middle aged women in the United Kingdom
recruited in 1996-2001 and followed by record linkage to routinely collected
NHS data on hospital admissions and deaths. During follow-up 239 614 admissions
were for surgery; 5419 women were admitted, and a further 270 died, from venous
thromboembolism.
Main outcome measures Adjusted relative risks and standardised
incidence rates for hospital admission or death from venous thromboembolism
(pulmonary embolism or deep vein thrombosis), by time since and type of
surgery.
Results Compared with not having surgery, women were 70 times
more likely to be admitted with venous thromboembolism in the first six weeks
after an inpatient operation (relative risk 69.1, 95% confidence interval 63.1
to 75.6) and 10 times more likely after a day case operation (9.6, 8.0 to
11.5). The risks were lower but still substantially increased 7-12 weeks after
surgery (19.6, 16.6 to 23.1 and 5.5, 4.3 to 7.0, respectively). This pattern of
risk was similar for pulmonary embolism (n=2487) and deep venous thrombosis
(n=3529). The postoperative risks of venous thromboembolism varied considerably
by surgery type, with highest relative risks after inpatient surgery for hip or
knee replacement and for cancer—1-6 weeks after surgery the relative risks
were, respectively, 220.6 (187.8 to 259.2) and 91.6 (73.9 to 113.4).
Conclusion The risk of deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary
embolism after surgery is substantially increased in the first 12 postoperative
weeks, and varies considerably by type of surgery. An estimated 1 in 140 middle
aged women undergoing inpatient surgery in the UK will be admitted with venous
thromboembolism during the 12 weeks after surgery (1 in 45 after hip or knee
replacement and 1 in 85 after surgery for cancer), compared with 1 in 815 after
day case surgery and only 1 in 6200 women during a 12 week period without
surgery.
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