| Literature DB >> 29302621 |
Dylan A Mistry1, Amit Chandratreya1,2, Paul Y F Lee3,4.
Abstract
Introduction Currently there are no consensuses in the national guidance on thromboprophylaxis following major elective lower limb surgery. Emerging clinical evidence suggests that aspirin could be just as effective as anticoagulants with a lower cost. The aim of this study was to provide an update based on literature of the past 3 years for the use of aspirin as thromboprophylaxis after knee and hip arthroplasty. Materials and Methods MEDLINE/EMBASE search was performed with appropriate terms for original articles from 2014 to 2017. Results Eight articles were found. Five articles concluded that aspirin was an effective prophylactic. The collation of results on the deep vein thrombosis rate involved 43,012 patients who were prescribed aspirin, of which 283 (0.66%) suffered from symptomatic deep vein thromboses. Aspirin was noted for its good side effect profile and cost effectiveness. It was noted that anticoagulants had a higher rate of complications, including bleeding and wound-oozing. Conclusion Aspirin is an effective and safe prophylactic against deep vein thrombosis following major elective lower limb arthroplasty surgery.Entities:
Keywords: anticoagulants; aspirin; deep vein thrombosis; prophylaxis; venous thromboembolism
Year: 2017 PMID: 29302621 PMCID: PMC5747531 DOI: 10.1055/s-0037-1615817
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg J (N Y) ISSN: 2378-5128
Summary of papers found by literature search that meet the inclusion criteria
| Study author | Type of study | Total number of patients | Surgery | Follow-up time | Comparison | Aspirin dose | Outcome measure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Raphael et al, 2014
| Retrospective study | 28,923 | Total joint arthroplasty | 90 d | Aspirin vs. variable dose warfarin | 325 mg BD | Symptomatic VTE, complications, mortality. |
|
Jiang et al, 2014
| RCT | 120 | Total knee arthroplasty | Unknown | Aspirin vs. LMWH/ rivaroxaban | Unknown | Incidence of VTE |
|
Zou et al, 2014
| RCT | 324 | Total knee arthroplasty | Unknown | Aspirin vs. LMWH vs. rivaroxaban | 100 mg/day | Incidence of DVT, complications |
|
Na et al, 2015
| Retrospective study | 328 | Total knee arthroplasty | 3 mo | Aspirin vs. LMWH and aspirin | 100 mg/d | Incidence of DVT or PE, complications |
|
Asopa et al, 2015
| Retrospective study | 9,035 | Hip and knee arthroplasty | 6 wk | n/a | 300 mg/d only given on discharge | Incidence of symptomatic VTE |
|
Pow and Vale, 2015
| Retrospective study | 402 | Total hip and knee arthroplasty | Unknown | Aspirin vs. anticoagulants in hospital and discharge | Unknown | VTE prophylaxis prescribing, incidence of VTE |
|
Ogonda et al, 2016
| Retrospective study | 11,459 | Total hip, total knee, and unicompartmental knee arthroplasty | 3 mo | Aspirin vs. National Joint Registry rates | 150 mg/d | Incidence of DVT and PE, mortality |
|
Yhim et al, 2017
| Retrospective study | 306,912 | Total hip and knee arthroplasty | 3 mo | Aspirin vs. anticoagulants and no thromboprophylaxis | Unknown | Incidence of VTE, prescription rates |
Abbreviations: BD, twice a day; DVT, deep vein thrombosis; LMWH, low molecular weight heparin; PE, pulmonary embolism; RCT, randomized control trial; VTE, venous thromboembolism.
Comparison of patients on aspirin in the arthroplasty studies with the number and rates of VTE
| Study author | Dose of aspirin | Length of treatment | Number of patients on aspirin | Number of patients who suffered from symptomatic DVT | Rate of symptomatic DVT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Raphael et al, 2014
| 325 mg BD | Unknown | 2,800 | 8 | 0.29% |
|
Jiang et al, 2014
| ? | ? | 60 | 0 | 0.00% |
|
Zou et al, 2014
| 100 mg/d | 14 d | 110 | 2 | 1.81% |
|
Na et al, 2015
| 100 mg/d | 14 d | 282 | 0 | 0.00% |
|
Pow and Vale, 2015
| Unknown | Minimum 10–14 d | 125 | 4 | 3.20% |
|
Ogonda et al, 2016
| 150 mg OD | 6 wk | 11,459 | 37 | 0.32% |
|
Yhim et al, 2017
| Unknown | On average for 9 d | 28,176 | 232 | 0.82% |
| Total | − | − | 43,012 | 283 | 0.66% |
Abbreviations: BD, twice a day; DVT, deep vein thrombosis; OD, once daily; VTE, venous thromboembolism.