| Literature DB >> 25699010 |
Farnaz Amoozegar1, Paul E Ronksley2, Reg Sauve3, Bijoy K Menon4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Use of oral contraceptive pills (OCP) increases the risk of cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST). Whether this risk varies by type, duration, and other forms of hormonal contraceptives is largely unknown. This systematic review and meta-analysis update the current state of knowledge.Entities:
Keywords: birth control pill; cerebral venous sinus thrombosis; cerebral venous thrombosis; hormonal contraceptives; oral contraceptive pill
Year: 2015 PMID: 25699010 PMCID: PMC4313700 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2015.00007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Flow diagram for studies included in systematic review and meta-analysis.
Characteristics of studies included (.
| Study (Author, year) | Study Setting | Cases (number) | Age range in years reported for cases | Cases (description) | Controls (number) | Age range in years reported for controls | Controls (description) | Type of hormonal contraception | Duration of exposure to hormonal contraceptives | Variables matched for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Martinelli et al., 1996 ( | Single center, Italy | 16 | 21–64 | First episode of CVT referred to the local thrombosis center; patients with neoplastic, autoimmune or infectious disease, pregnant and post-partum women were excluded. | 48 | not reported | Healthy controls with no history of thrombosis; no pregnant, post-partum women were included | Oral contraceptive only | Not reported | Age matched |
| Martinelli et al., 1998 ( | Single center, Italy | 25 | 15–64 (not reported after excluding pregnant, post-partum and post-menopausal women) | First episode of CVT referred to the local thrombosis center; none of them had neoplastic, autoimmune, or infectious disease; post-traumatic patients, pregnant and post-partum women as well as post-menopausal women were excluded | 88 | 18–64 | Healthy, biologically unrelated friends or partners of patients with no history of thrombosis; pregnant and post-partum women as well as post-menopausal women were also excluded | Oral contraceptives only | Cases (median = 15 months); controls (median = 26 months) | Age, geographic location and level of education |
| Reuner et al., 1998 ( | Multi center, Germany | 31 | 17–69 | Patients with CVT aged 17–50 years; no data on whether patients with neoplastic, autoimmune, infectious disease were excluded; patients’ post-partum and in puerperium were excluded | 148 | 18–63 | Healthy blood donors aged 18–50 years | Oral contraceptive | Not reported | Age matched |
| de Bruijn et al., 1998 ( | Multi- centre, Netherlands | 40 | 18–54 | Patients with CVT who participated in a treatment trial with heparin; younger than 18, pregnant and puerperium women were excluded | 2248 | 18–49 | Women aged 18–49 years from the continuous health interview survey of the Central Department of Statistic, Netherlands (pregnant women were not excluded) | Oral contraceptives only | Not reported | No |
| Martinelli et al., 2003 ( | Single center, Italy | 80 | 12–64 (includes male patients) | First episode of CVT referred to the local thrombosis center; patients with neoplastic, autoimmune, or infectious disease, post-traumatic patients, pregnant and post-partum women as well as post-menopausal women were not explicitly excluded | 148 | 13–62 (includes males) | Healthy, biologically unrelated friends, or partners of patients with no history of thrombosis; no pregnant, post-partum women, or post-menopausal women were included | Oral contraceptives; other hormonal contraceptives mentioned | Not reported | Age matched |
| Cantu et al., 2004 ( | Single center, Mexico | 37 | 14–55 (includes male patients) | Patients with CVT admitted to hospital; no data on whether patients with neoplastic, autoimmune, infectious disease, patients’ post-partum, or in puerperium were excluded | 66 | 16–53 (includes males) | Healthy controls of friends or relatives of other patients with neurological diseases who have no history of vitamin intake and no history of thrombosis | Oral contraceptive | Not reported | Recruitment directed toward young women |
| Rodrigues et al., 2004 ( | Single center, Brazil | 20 | 28 (median) | Consecutive patients with CVT; no data on whether patients with neoplastic, autoimmune, infectious disease were excluded; patients who were post-partum were however excluded | 40 | 34 (median) | Women aged 20–50 years that came as outpatients for reasons other than thrombosis | Oral contraceptive only | Not reported | No |
| Ventura et al., 2004 ( | Single center, Italy | 14 | 19–44 | Patients with CVT admitted to hospital; patients with neoplastic, autoimmune or infectious disease were excluded; no data on pregnancy, post-partum, or puerperium. Patients with use of OCPs <3 months prior to CVT were excluded | 18 | 18–51 (including males) | Healthy volunteers with no history of thrombosis, cancer, cardiac, renal, liver, or hematological disorders and not taking any drugs or OCPs for at least 3 months prior to recruitment | Oral contraceptives only | Not reported | No |
| Gadelha et al., 2005 ( | Single center, Brazil | 19 | 3–46 (not reported for females) | Patients with CVT referred to the hemostasis lab of a tertiary university hospital, age >15 years and <50 years, pregnant and post-partum women excluded, major systemic diseases like cancer, diabetes, infectious or collagen disease, antiphospholipid syndrome; pregnant women or women in puerperium excluded. | 134 | 15–62 (includes males) | Healthy controls accompanying patients to the same lab with no history of thrombosis or genetic relationship, age, and race matched | Oral contraceptives only | Not reported | Age Matched |
Study quality assessment. (.
| Study (Author, year) | Well-defined cases | Well-defined controls | Matched controls | Timing of exposure | Adjustment for confounding variables |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Martinelli et al., 1996 ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Age |
| Martinelli et al., 1998 ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | PT, FV |
| Reuner et al., 1998 ( | No | No | Yes | No | None |
| de Bruijn et al., 1998 ( | Yes | No | No | No | Age |
| Martinelli et al., 2003 ( | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Age, BMI, smoking, HyperHcy |
| Cantu et al., 2004 ( | No | Yes | No | No | None |
| Rodrigues et al., 2004 ( | No | No | No | No | None |
| Ventura et al., 2004 ( | No | No | No | No | None |
| Gadelha et al., 2005 ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | PT, FV |
A study is defined as being of high quality if it satisfies at least four of the five criteria above.
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HyperHcy is hyper-homocysteinemia.
Figure 2Forest plot with pooled odds ratio for relationship between oral contraceptive use and cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (random effects model).
Figure 3Cumulative meta-analysis using the random effects model.
Stratified analysis of pooled odds ratios with 95% confidence intervals (.
| Odds ratio | 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Yes ( | 8.26 | 3.95–17.25 | 0.84 |
| No ( | 5.73 | 0.79–41.49 | |
| Within 2 weeks ( | 11.15 | 4.44–27.98 | 0.51 |
| Beyond 2 weeks ( | 5.58 | 1.91–16.31 | |
| >27.7% ( | 6.4 | 1.99–20.57 | 0.82 |
| ≤27.7% ( | 8.63 | 3.45–21.57 | |
| Developed ( | 8.48 | 3.88–18.51 | 0.76 |
| Developing ( | 5.57 | 1.01–30.61 | |
| Well done ( | 13.15 | 6.06–28.52 | 0.35 |
| Incomplete ( | 5.05 | 1.72–14.87 | |
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Figure 4Assessment of publication bias in meta-analysis using a funnel plot.