2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejim.2014.07.005
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Venous thromboembolism prophylaxis in acutely ill hospitalized medical patients. A retrospective multicenter study

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Cited by 15 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Elderly patients have a higher number of concomitant diseases, thus, differences in the mean age of included patients beside the definition of the high VTE risk in the different studies, may explain these results. Anyway, other recent studies including Italian and European populations (15,16) found similar risk profiles reinforcing the external validity of our results. Moreover, although the use of antithrombotic prophylaxis in patients at high risk of VTE according to the PPS seems to be associated with a reduced risk of VTE (9,17), no high quality RCT has evaluated the risk/benefit profile of this treatment.…”
Section: Agesupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Elderly patients have a higher number of concomitant diseases, thus, differences in the mean age of included patients beside the definition of the high VTE risk in the different studies, may explain these results. Anyway, other recent studies including Italian and European populations (15,16) found similar risk profiles reinforcing the external validity of our results. Moreover, although the use of antithrombotic prophylaxis in patients at high risk of VTE according to the PPS seems to be associated with a reduced risk of VTE (9,17), no high quality RCT has evaluated the risk/benefit profile of this treatment.…”
Section: Agesupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Another relevant difference of our study is that it is exclusively confined to medical patients, as well as the extremely high age and degree of comorbidity of our cohort, compared with larger series in which patients with a mean age more than 10 years younger and very low rates of multiple comorbidity were included. 19 20 …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to a systematic review[ 9 ], limited evidence suggests that the use of compressive and pneumatic devices does not yield significantly different results compared with no treatment. Research by Lilly et al[ 10 ] also indicated that the mortality risk of those receiving mechanical device prophylaxis was not lower than that of patients without VTE prophylaxis and that patients managed with prophylactic anticoagulation therapy had a significantly lower risk of death than those receiving only mechanical device prophylaxis. A study comparing IPC and GCS[ 11 ] showed that the use of IPC was associated with a significantly lower VTE incidence compared with no mechanical thromboprophylaxis but that GCS use was not associated with a decreased VTE incidence.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%