PREGNANCY
THROMBOPROPHYLAXIS
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Obstet
Gynecol Surv. 1999 Apr;54(4):265-71.
Deep vein thrombosis during pregnancy and the puerperium: a meta-analysis of
the period of risk and the leg of presentation.
Ray JG, Chan WS.
Department of Medicine, Women's College Hospital, University of Toronto,
Canada.
We performed a meta-analysis of all published studies of deep vein
thrombosis during pregnancy and the puerperium using MEDLINE between 1966
and May 1998. Data were pooled using a random effects model. Fourteen
studies included relevant information on deep vein thrombosis in pregnancy
or the puerperium, and used objective testing to diagnose deep vein
thrombosis. The pooled event rate for left sided or bilateral deep vein
thrombosis was 82.2 percent (95 percent CI 75.1 to 87.5). There was no
statistical evidence of heterogeneity for this figure (P = .08). Twelve
studies reported on the trimester in which deep vein thrombosis was
diagnosed. The deep vein thrombosis event rate during the first trimester
was 21.9 percent (95 percent CI 17.4 to 27.3), 33.7 percent (95 percent CI
28.1 to 39.8) during the second trimester, and 47.6 percent (95 percent CI
39.2 to 56.2) for the third trimester. Heterogeneity testing was not
significant. Nine studies compared deep vein thrombosis events between the
antepartum and puerperium periods, with 65.5 percent (95 percent CI 58.1 to
72.1) arising during pregnancy, and 34.5 percent (95 percent CI 27.9 to
41.9) postpartum (P = .08, not heterogeneous). Using these figures, the
estimated relative distribution of 100 deep vein thrombosis events during
pregnancy and the puerperium would be 0.23 per day during pregnancy, and
0.82 per day in the postpartum period. During pregnancy and the puerperium,
deep vein thrombosis is more likely to arise in the left leg. More than half
of all deep vein thromboses during pregnancy occur during the first and
second trimesters. Furthermore, during the puerperium, the risk of
developing deep vein thrombosis is significantly higher than antepartum.
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