Literature DB >> 23726964

Long-term mortality and incidence of cancer after pregnancy-related venous thrombosis: results of a population-based cohort study.

Hilde S Wik1, Anne F Jacobsen, Morten W Fagerland, Leiv Sandvik, Per Morten Sandset.   

Abstract

The long-term mortality and incidence of cancer after pregnancy-related venous thrombosis (VT) is not known. In this population-based cohort study we identified women with a first-ever pregnancy-related VT (cases, n = 557)) from 18 Norwegian hospitals during 1990-2003. Hospital controls (n = 1214) were selected among women who gave birth at the same time as a case. All participants were linked to the Norwegian Cause of Death Registry and to the Cancer Registry of Norway in 2012. The general age-adjusted Norwegian female population was used as a second control group to calculate the standardized mortality ratio (SMR) and the standardized incidence ratio (SIR) for cancer. Ten cases (1.8%) and seven hospital controls (0.6%) died during follow-up. Mortality was 3.2 times higher among cases as compared with hospital controls when adjusted for age (HR 3.2, 95% confidence interval 1.2-8.5, p = 0.018). The SMR for the first year of follow-up was 18.8 (7.8-45.3) and for the rest of the study period 0.9 (0.4-2.0). Fifteen cases (2.7%) and 13 hospital controls (1.1%) were diagnosed with cancer after index pregnancy. The incidence of cancer was 2.6 times higher among cases compared with hospital controls when adjusted for age (HR 2.6, 1.3-5.6, p = 0.011), but compared with the age-adjusted female population in Norway there was no excess risk of cancer (SIR 1.0, 95% CI 0.6-1.7). Mortality and incidence of cancer after pregnancy-related VT was low. Both were increased among cases compared with hospital controls, but not when compared with the general population, except for mortality during the first year after VT.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23726964     DOI: 10.1016/j.thromres.2013.04.035

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Thromb Res        ISSN: 0049-3848            Impact factor:   3.944


  1 in total

1.  Pregnancy-related venous thromboembolism and risk of occult cancer.

Authors:  Anette Tarp Hansen; Katalin Veres; Erzsébet Horváth-Puhó; Vera Ehrenstein; Paolo Prandoni; Henrik Toft Sørensen
Journal:  Blood Adv       Date:  2017-10-19
  1 in total

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