62 research outputs found

    Prevention of venous thromboembolism after hip and knee replacement among older adults

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    BACKGROUND: Venous thromboembolism (VTE) after total hip and knee replacement is a major patient safety threat, and pharmacologic prophylaxis is generally recommended. However, clinicians disagree on the optimal prophylaxis agent. OBJECTIVE: We sought to compare effectiveness and safety of aspirin versus anticoagulants for VTE prophylaxis after hip and knee replacement. METHODS: We identified patients aged ≥ 65 years undergoing elective hip and knee replacement during 2011–2013 in 59 hospitals nationwide and included in the Institute for Health Metrics clinical database. We limited our analysis to the patients with electronic medical record of discharge prophylaxis medication. Patients were categorized into either anticoagulant or aspirin only group. VTE, major hemorrhage, cardiovascular event, and death were identified from electronic databases and validated by physician review of the source documents. We compared the 90-day risk of VTE and the composite outcome (VTE, cardiovascular events, major hemorrhage, and death) in the anticoagulant group to the aspirin group using Cox proportional hazards analysis. RESULTS: Study sample included 5648 patients with mean age 73 years. The overall number of outcome events was low. There were 35 VTE events (0.61%), 15 (0.26%) cardiovascular events, 17 major hemorrhages (0.30%), and 18 deaths (0.31%). In multivariable analysis adjusting for patient demographics and cardiovascular disease and risk factors, anticoagulation therapy was associated with decreased risk of VTE (HR 0.76, 95% CI 0.35–1.68) and the composite outcome (HR 0.80, 95% CI 0.48–1.32) although not statistically significant. CONCLUSION: Among older adults undergoing elective total hip and knee replacement in community hospitals, the 90-day risk of VTE and the composite outcome was low. We did not find any statistical difference in the risk of the outcomes between anticoagulation and aspirin. Future studies with a larger sample size and different patient population are needed to validate our results.2019-11-08T00:00:00

    Metabolomic Profiling in Relation to New-Onset Atrial Fibrillation (from the Framingham Heart Study)

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    Previous studies have shown several metabolic biomarkers to be associated with prevalent and incident atrial fibrillation (AF), but the results have not been replicated. We investigated metabolite profiles of 2,458 European ancestry participants from the Framingham Heart Study without AF at the index examination and followed them for 10 years for new-onset AF. Amino acids, organic acids, lipids, and other plasma metabolites were profiled by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry using fasting plasma samples. We conducted Cox proportional hazard analyses for association between metabolites and new-onset AF. We performed hypothesis-generating analysis to identify novel metabolites and hypothesis-testing analysis to confirm the previously reported associations between metabolites and AF. Mean age was 55.1 ± 9.9 years, and 53% were women. Incident AF developed in 156 participants (6.3%) in 10 years of follow-up. A total of 217 metabolites were examined, consisting of 54 positively charged metabolites, 59 negatively charged metabolites, and 104 lipids. None of the 217 metabolites met our a priori specified Bonferroni corrected level of significance in the multivariate analyses. We were unable to replicate previous results demonstrating associations between metabolites that we had measured and AF. In conclusion, in our metabolomics approach, none of the metabolites we tested were significantly associated with the risk of future AF

    Whole Genome Analysis of Venous Thromboembolism: the Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine Program

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    BACKGROUND: Risk for venous thromboembolism has a strong genetic component. Whole genome sequencing from the TOPMed program (Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine) allowed us to look for new associations, particularly rare variants missed by standard genome-wide association studies. METHODS: The 3793 cases and 7834 controls (11.6% of cases were individuals of African, Hispanic/Latino, or Asian ancestry) were analyzed using a single variant approach and an aggregate gene-based approach using our primary filter (included only loss-of-function and missense variants predicted to be deleterious) and our secondary filter (included all missense variants). RESULTS: Single variant analyses identified associations at 5 known loci. Aggregate gene-based analyses identified only PROC (odds ratio, 6.2 for carriers of rare variants; P=7.4×10-14) when using our primary filter. Employing our secondary variant filter led to a smaller effect size at PROC (odds ratio, 3.8; P=1.6×10-14), while excluding variants found only in rare isoforms led to a larger one (odds ratio, 7.5). Different filtering strategies improved the signal for 2 other known genes: PROS1 became significant (minimum P=1.8×10-6 with the secondary filter), while SERPINC1 did not (minimum P=4.4×10-5 with minor allele frequency \u3c0.0005). Results were largely the same when restricting the analyses to include only unprovoked cases; however, one novel gene, MS4A1, became significant (P=4.4×10-7 using all missense variants with minor allele frequency \u3c0.0005). CONCLUSIONS: Here, we have demonstrated the importance of using multiple variant filtering strategies, as we detected additional genes when filtering variants based on their predicted deleteriousness, frequency, and presence on the most expressed isoforms. Our primary analyses did not identify new candidate loci; thus larger follow-up studies are needed to replicate the nove

    Anticoagulation in the Older Adult: Optimizing Benefit and Reducing Risk

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