SummaryThromboprophylaxis with oral anticoagulants up to six months is established in patients after a first venous thromboembolic event (VTE). The risk of recurrent VTE is still considerable thereafter, and it is uncertain whether some patients might benefit from extended anticoagulation. We performed a prospective, multicenter trial (4 thrombosis centers) and evaluated in 380 patients with a first or recurrent VTE (patients with a deficiency of antithrombin, protein C, protein S or plasminogen; cancer; or an antiphospholipid antibody syndrome were excluded) the risk of recurrence after discontinuation of secondary thromboprophylaxis with oral anticoagulants. It was the aim of the study to evaluate whether patients with factor V Leiden are at an increased risk of recurrent VTE. 112 (29.5%) patients were carriers of factor V Leiden (26.9% heterozygous, 2.6% homozygous). After a median observation time of 19.3 months the overall recurrence rate of VTE was 9.9%. Recurrent deep vein thrombosis and/or pulmonary embolism occurred in 26 of 268 patients without factor V Leiden (9.7%) and in 10 of 112 patients with factor V Leiden (8.9%). The probability of recurrent VTE two years after discontinuation of oral anticoagulants was 12.4% (95% Cl 7.8-17) in patients without factor V Leiden and was 10.6% (95% Cl 3.8-17.4) in carriers of the mutation. This difference was statistically not significant. Patients with factor V Leiden are not at a higher risk of recurrent VTE within two years after discontinuation of oral anticoagulants than patients without factor V Leiden. Balancing the risk of recurrent VTE and bleeding from oral. anticoagulants, patients with factor V Leiden are not likely to benefit from oral anticoagulant therapy extended beyond six months.
The incidence of pseudoaneurysm after transfemoral arterial catheterization depends on the type of intervention. The main risk factor is too brief a period of manual compression.
Abstract-A genetic variation in the prothrombin gene, the G3 A transition at nucleotide 20210, is a risk factor for venous thrombosis in heterozygotes and is associated with increased prothrombin activity. The homozygous phenotype and the extent of thrombin generation in heterozygous and homozygous subjects are unknown. We investigated a family that included 2 homozygous and 5 heterozygous carriers of the 20210 A allele. The homozygous propositus and his presumably heterozygous father suffered from deep-vein thrombosis. His presumably heterozygous mother and his homozygous sister had recurrent phlebitis at a young age. The remaining 5 affected family members are still asymptomatic. We studied thrombin generation in the family and in 22 unrelated carriers of the 20210 A allele by measuring (1) prothrombin fragment F1ϩ2 (F1ϩ2) as an index of ongoing thrombin generation and (2) the endogenous thrombin potential (ETP) as an index of the possible thrombin-forming capacity. Their F1ϩ2 levels were not different from those of age-matched controls, and thus, ongoing hemostatic system activation was not detectable. A significantly increased ETP was found in the heterozygous carriers of the 20210A allele compared with the controls (527.8Ϯ114.9 versus 387Ϯ50
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