Thrombosis |
1 Center for Atherothrombotic Research in Tromsø (CART), Department of Medicine
2 Department of Neurology, Institute of Clinical Medicine
3 Institute of Community Medicine, University of Tromsø, Norway
Correspondence: Sigrid Kufaas Brækkan, Center for Atherothrombotic, Research in Tromsø (CART), Department of Medicine, Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Tromsø, N-9037, Tromsø, Norway. E-mail: sigrid.brakkan{at}uit.no
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Design and Methods: Hematocrit and related hematologic variables such as hemoglobin, red blood cell count, mean corpuscular volume, and baseline characteristics were measured in 26,108 subjects, who participated in the Tromsø Study in 1994–1995. Incident venous thromboembolic events during follow-up were registered up to September 1st, 2007.
Results: There were 447 venous thromboembolic events during a median of 12.5 years of follow-up. Multivariable hazard ratios per 5% increment of hematocrit for the total population, adjusted for age, body mass index and smoking, were 1.25 (95% CI: 1.08–1.44) for total venous thromboembolism and 1.37 (95% CI: 1.10–1.71) for unprovoked venous thromboembolism. In category-based analyses, men with a hematocrit in the upper 20th percentile (
46% in men) had a 1.5-fold increased risk of total venous thromboembolism (95% CI: 1.08–2.21) and a 2.4-fold increased risk of unprovoked venous thromboembolism (95% CI: 1.36–4.15) compared to men whose hematocrit was in the lower 40th percentile. The risk estimates were higher for men than for women both in continuous and category-based analyses. The findings for hemoglobin and red blood cell count were similar to those for hematocrit, whereas mean corpuscular volume was not associated with venous thromboembolism.
Conclusions: Our findings suggest that hematocrit and related hematologic variables such as hemoglobin and red blood cell count are risk factors for venous thromboembolism in a general population.
Key words: hematocrit, population range, arterial and venous thrombosis.
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As Virchow postulated, the risk of VTE is primarily related to hypercoagulability, altered blood flow, or endothelial vascular lesions.4 Hematocrit, the proportion of blood volume occupied by red blood cells (RBC), is one of the major determinants of blood viscosity. An increase in the hematocrit is associated with increased blood viscosity,5 reduced venous return,6 and increased adhesiveness of platelets.7 It is well known that subjects with hematocrit levels above the normal range for the population, such as in primary or secondary erythrocytosis, are predisposed to both arterial cardiovascular disease and venous thrombosis.8–12 Hematocrit has also been associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality in a general population.13
The impact of hemoconcentration on the risk of VTE in a general population has, to our knowledge, not been extensively investigated in prospective studies. We, therefore, wanted to examine whether hematocrit and related hematologic variables, such as hemoglobin, RBC count and mean corpuscular volume (MCV), were associated with the incidence of VTE. To address these questions, we performed a prospective, population-based study in 26,108 adults, followed for a median of 12.5 years, and assessed the impact of hematocrit and related hematologic variables on the risk of VTE.
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Measurements
Baseline information was collected from physical examination, blood samples, and self-administered questionnaires. Non-fasting blood samples were collected from an antecubital vein, and analyzed at the Department of Clinical Chemistry, University Hospital of North Norway. For measurements of hematocrit, hemoglobin, RBC count, and MCV, 5 mL of blood were drawn into Vacutainer tubes, containing EDTA as an anticoagulant (K3 –EDTA 40 µL, 0.37 mol/L per tube), and analyzed within 12 h in an automated blood cell counter (Coulter Counter®, Coulter Electronics, Luton, UK). Body height and weight were measured, with subjects wearing light clothing and no shoes. BMI was calculated as weight in kilograms, divided by the square of height in meters (kg/m2). Information on current smoking was collected from a self-administered questionnaire. The smoking questions were "Do you smoke: cigarettes or cigars/cigarillos or a pipe daily?" (Yes= yes to any of these questions, No = No to all of these questions).
Records of venous thromboembolism
All first lifetime events of VTE were identified by searching the hospital discharge diagnosis registry, the autopsy registry, and the radiology procedure registry at the University Hospital of North Norway, from date of enrollment in the Tromsø study, to September 1st, 2007. The University Hospital of North Norway is the only hospital in the region, and all hospital care and relevant diagnostic radiology procedures in the Tromsø municipality are provided exclusively by this hospital. The hospital discharge diagnosis registry includes records on both outpatient clinic visits and inpatient hospital admissions. The relevant discharge codes were ICD-9 codes 325, 415.1, 451, 452, 453, 671.3, 671.4, 671.9 for the period 1994–1998 and ICD-10 codes I80.0-I80.3, I80.8, I80.9, I81, I82.0-I82.3, I82.8, I82.9, I67.6, O22.3, O22.5, O87.1, O87.3, I26.0 and I26.9 for the period 1999–2007. An additional search through the computerized index of autopsy diagnoses was conducted, and cases diagnosed with VTE, either as a cause of death, or as a significant condition, were identified. We also searched the radiology database in order to identify cases of objectively confirmed VTE that had been missed because of coding errors in the hospital discharge diagnosis registry. All relevant diagnostic procedures, performed at the Department of Radiology to diagnose VTE during the 13-year period, were systematically reviewed by trained personnel and cases with objectively confirmed VTE were identified.
The medical records for each potential case of VTE, derived from the hospital discharge diagnosis registry, the autopsy registry, or the radiology procedure registry, were reviewed by trained personnel. For cases identified from the hospital discharge diagnosis registry and the radiology procedure registry, an episode of VTE was verified and recorded as a validated outcome when all four of the following criteria were fulfilled; (i) objectively confirmed by diagnostic procedures (compression ultrasonography, venography, spiral computed tomography, perfusion-ventilation scanning, pulmonary angiography or autopsy); (ii) the medical record indicated that a physician had made a diagnosis of deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism; (iii) signs and symptoms consistent with deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism were present; and (iv) the patient received therapy with anticoagulants (heparin, warfarin, or a similar agent) or thrombolytics, or underwent vascular surgery. For cases identified from the autopsy registry, a venous thromboembolic event was recorded as an outcome when the autopsy record indicated VTE as cause of death or as a significant condition.
A venous thromboembolic event was further classified as unprovoked or provoked, based on the presence of provoking factors at the time of the diagnosis of the VTE. A VTE occurring without any provoking factor was defined as unprovoked, whereas a VTE occurring in the presence of one or more provoking factors was defined as provoked. The following were regarded as provoking factors: recent surgery or trauma (within 8 weeks preceding the event), an acute medical condition (acute myocardial infarction, acute ischemic stroke, major infectious disease), cancer, marked immobilization (bed rest >3 days, wheelchair, long distance travel
4 h within the last 14 days), or other provoking factor specifically described by a physician in the medical records (e.g. intravascular catheter).
Statistical analyses
For each participant, person-years of follow-up were accrued from the date of enrollment in 1994–95 through to the date a venous thromboembolic event was first diagnosed, the date the participant died or moved from the municipality of Tromsø, or through to the end of the study period, September 1st, 2007.
Statistical analysis was carried out using SPSS version 15.0 (SPSS Inc. Chicago, IL, USA). Cox-proportional hazards regression models were used to estimate hazard ratios, with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI), for total (unprovoked + provoked) and unprovoked VTE. Hazard ratios for hematocrit, hemoglobin, RBC count, and MCV were estimated in analyses adjusted for age, and in a multivariable model including age, smoking, and BMI as covariates. There were no statistical interactions between the hematologic variables and gender. However, gender-specific analyses were carried out for the sake of interest, because the normal ranges of hematocrit, hemoglobin, and RBC count are generally higher in men than in women.13 In order to explore the impact of various levels of hematocrit and hemoglobin on the risk of total VTE, hematocrit and hemoglobin were modeled into three intervals representing the lowest 40th, the middle 40th and the highest 20th percentiles (hematocrit: <39, 39–41, and
42 % in women and <43, 43–45,
46% in men; hemoglobin: <13.2, 13.2–14.0,
14.1 g/dL in women and <14.7, 14.7–15.5,
15.6 g/dL in men). In these analyses, the lowest interval was used as the reference group. The proportional hazard assumption was verified by evaluating the parallelism between the curves of the log-log survivor function for quartiles of the hematologic variables.
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Table 1. Baseline characteristics of subjects enrolled in the Tromsø study 1994–95.
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Table 2. Characteristics of VTE patients (n= 447). The Tromsø study, 1994–2007.
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Table 3. Gender-specific hazard ratios (HR) with 95% confidence interval (CI) for total and unprovoked VTE. The Tromsø study 1994–2007.
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Table 4. Gender-specific crude incidence rates (IR) and age-adjusted hazard ratios (HR) with 95% confidence interval (CI), by levels of hematocrit and hemoglobin. The Tromsø study, 1994–2007.
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The risk of VTE by hematocrit has not been extensively examined in prospective studies of general populations. The LITE study,14 a prospective cohort of 19,923 subjects aged 45 years and above, which primarily investigated the association between traditional cardiovascular risk factors and VTE, found no increased risk of VTE by increasing tertiles of either hematocrit or hemoglobin. However, the cut-off levels for the highest tertile were 43.5% for hematocrit and 14.5 g/dL for hemoglobin, and further levels of these variables were not explored.14 In a small case-control study by Vaya et al.,15 the proportion of subjects with a hematocrit above 45% was significantly greater among VTE cases than among healthy controls.
Recent studies have suggested a link between VTE and arterial cardiovascular disease.16–18 Whether this apparent association is caused by sharing of common traditional cardiovascular risk factors or through other yet unknown risk factors or mechanism(s) is unknown. Hematocrit levels above the normal range are associated with increased risk of both arterial and venous thrombosis.8–12 High levels of hematocrit have also shown significant associations with coronary heart disease in some studies of general populations,19 implying that hematocrit, a factor that affects hemorheology, might contribute to the observed link between arterial and venous thrombosis.
Several studies support the concept that hematocrit has an influence on hemostasis and thrombosis. Low hematocrit is associated with an increased risk of bleeding, and this effect can be corrected by transfusion.7 Furthermore, studies of thrombocytopenic patients have shown improvement in bleeding times after transfusion, despite a lack of increase in platelet count.20 Increased hematocrit has been the only predictive factor of venous and arterial thrombosis in subjects with polycythemia vera, whereas high platelet counts and abnormal platelet function were not significantly linked to polycythemia vera-associated thrombosis.9,11,12 Rheological therapies, including compression devices21 and hemodilution with dextran,22 have been shown to reduce the risk of deep vein thrombosis in patients with polycythemia vera.
Hematocrit is one of the major determinants of blood viscosity,5 and increases in the hematocrit might favor clot formation by increasing the residence time of circulating platelets and coagulation factors adjacent to dysfunctional endothelium. Furthermore, elevated hematocrit has been shown to promote the transport of platelets towards the vessel wall, thereby increasing the interaction with the vasculature.23 Blood clotting is also dependent on the velocity gradient at which the clotting takes place. The influence of the hematocrit on blood viscosity increases when the shear rate decreases.5,24 Under low-flow conditions, such as in the venous system, increases in hematocrit may have a strong influence on blood flow and, thereby, clinical outcome.
RBC mass may also have a direct effect on thrombotic mechanisms. A recent experimental study investigating the effect of RBC on thrombin generation, showed that the total amount of thrombin activity generated, and the maximum concentration of thrombin achieved, was proportional to the hematocrit.25 RBC may also take part in thrombus formation by other mechanisms, such as stimulation of platelet aggregation through ADP release,26–28 or possibly through the exposure of phosphatidylserine.29
The main strengths of our study are its prospective design, the large number of participants recruited from a general population with high attendance rate, the long-term follow-up, and the validation of the venous thromboembolic events. All hospital care and radiological imaging in the region is provided exclusively by a single hospital, which enhances the possibility of a complete VTE registry. However, the study has some limitations. Modifiable risk factors, such as hematocrit and related hematologic variables, are a potential weakness of cohort studies, especially when the time between exposure and disease manifestation is long. However, this type of non-differential misclassification generally leads to underestimation of the true associations. In our study, smoking was assessed as a dichotomous variable (current smoker: yes/no). Thus, we were unable to take into consideration the potential dose-dependent effect of smoking on hematocrit, and thereby unable to remove all possible confounding by smoking. Underlying medical conditions such as lung, heart and kidney diseases can influence the level of hematocrit. In our study, information on other medical conditions was only available for those who developed VTE. In men, the presence of other medical conditions did not differ across various levels of hematocrit (data not shown). In women, the presence of other medical conditions was slightly higher among those whose hematocrit was in the upper 20th percentile. Since there was no available clinical information on underlying disease during follow-up in the reference group, we did not have sufficient clinical information for the total population to consider underlying disease as a possible cause of high hematocrit and risk of thrombosis in detail.
In conclusion, hematocrit and the related variables hemoglobin and RBC count were identified as risk factors for VTE in our prospective, population-based study. The size of red blood cells, expressed as MCV, was not associated with VTE. Our findings may suggest that hematocrit should be taken into consideration for risk assessment in VTE.
SKB and JBH were the principal investigators. SKB was involved in data collection, analysis of the data, and was the leading author in drafting the manuscript. JBH was the main contributor to the conception and design of the study, and participated in interpretation of the results and revision of the manuscript. EBM and IN contributed to the study design and acquisition of data. TW provided statistical assistance. All authors participated in critical revision of the entire manuscript, and approved the final version of the manuscript. The authors reported no potential conflicts of interest.
Received for publication March 9, 2009. Revision received August 8, 2009. Accepted for publication August 11, 2009.
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