The John Charnley Award: heritable thrombophilia and development of thromboembolic disease after total hip arthroplasty. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • UNLABELLED: We retrospectively assessed whether heritable thrombophilia-hypofibrinolysis was more common in patients developing venous thromboembolism after total hip replacement than among control patients who did not develop venous thromboembolism, as an approach to better identify causes of venous thromboembolism after total hip arthroplasty. Twenty patients with proximal deep venous thrombosis after THA and 23 patients with symptomatic pulmonary embolism were compared with 43 control patients who did not have postoperative venous thromboembolism. Five of 42 patients with venous thromboembolism (12%) and 0 of 43 control patients (0%) had antithrombin III deficiency (< 75%). Nine of 42 patients with venous thromboembolism (21%) and 2 of 43 control patients (4.7%) had protein C deficiency (< 70%). Ten of 43 patients with venous thromboembolism (9 heterozygous, 1 homozygous; 23%) and 1 of 43 control patients (heterozygous; 2%) had the prothrombin gene mutation. Patients who had venous thromboembolism after total hip arthroplasty were more likely than matched control patients to have heritable thrombophilia with antithrombin III or protein C deficiency, or homo-heterozygosity for the prothrombin gene mutation. Screening for these three tests of heritable thrombophilia before total hip arthroplasty should improve the identification of patients with a reduced risk of venous thromboembolism who may need only mild thromboprophylaxis, and of those patients with heritable thrombophilia in whom prophylaxis should be more aggressive. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Prognostic study, Level II-1 (lesser-quality RCT). See the Guidelines for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.

publication date

  • December 1, 2005

Research

keywords

  • Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip
  • Thrombophilia
  • Venous Thrombosis

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 33644790098

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1097/01.blo.0000192366.61616.81

PubMed ID

  • 16330983

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 441