Venous Thromboembolic Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Risk of Venous Thromboembolism in First Degree Relatives of Women With or Without Venous Thromboembolism During Hormonal Exposure
Young women have an increased risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) during hormonale exposure
(estrogen-containing pill or pregnancy). In order to detect women at higher risk of VTE
during hormonal exposure, thrombophilia testing is often performed in order to adapt
contraception methods and/or to increases thromboprophylaxy during pregnancy. However, such
practice is probably not accurate nor discriminent. Indeed, there are evidence that the
impact of the familial history of VTE might be stronger than that of detectable inherited
thrombophilia.
The "FIT-H" study is a cross-sectional study comparing the prevalence of previous venous
thromboembolism in first-degree relatives of women (propositi) who had a first episode of
venous thromboembolism in association with hormonal exposure with the prevalence of previous
venous thromboembolism in first-degree relatives of women who did not have venous
thromboembolism during a similar hormonal exposure.
The primary objective is to determine the association between the presence or the absence of
VTE in young women during hormonal exposure and the presence or the absence of a previous
episode of VTE in their first-degree relatives. Secondary objective is to determine the
impact of associated inherited thrombophilia on the risk of VTE in first-degree relatives.
Rational
The annual incidence of venous thromboembolism (VTE) is about 1 to 2/1000 person-years and
mortality is 10% when VTE occurs as pulmonary embolism. VTE is a multifactorial disease
caused by hereditary and acquired risk factors. Among the latter, hormonal exposure in young
women (estrogen-containing pill, pregnancy) remains a major health issue given the frequency
of this condition and the 4 to 5-fold increased risk of VTE in the presence of such exposure.
In practice, inherited thrombophilia screening is often performed with the aim to identify
young women at higher risk for VTE and to avoid estrogen-containing pill or to reinforce
thromboprophylaxis during pregnancy. The increased risk of thrombosis in relatives is
incompletely explained by the presence of known thrombophilias, as the risk of thrombosis in
first-degree relatives is increased even if patients do not have a detectable defect.8,9 In a
large cross-sectional study including 2830 first-degree relatives of patients with VTE, we
previously showed that the risk of VTE in the first-degree relatives of patients with a first
VTE is strongly influenced by whether the VTE was provoked or unprovoked, the patient's age
when the VTE occurred, and the number of relatives who have had thrombosis. The risk of VTE
in first-degree relatives is about twice as high if the index case had an unprovoked compared
to a provoked VTE, is about three times as high if the index case had VTE before about 50
years compared to later in life, and at least twice as high if two rather than one family
members have had VTE. The influence of these factors on the risk of VTE in first-degree
relatives was additive, and occurred independently of the presence of factor V Leiden or the
prothrombin 20210A gene in index cases. The underlying hypothesis is that patients who have
unprovoked VTE or at a young age often have undetected hereditary thrombophilias and that
these defects increase the risk of thrombosis in their relatives. However, the number of
included young women in the study was to low to confirm if such familial risk was also
elevated if young women were on hormonal exposure.
In the present study, our hypothesis is that the risk of VTE in first-degree relatives of
young women with VTE on hormonal exposure will be higher than that in first-degree relatives
of young women on a similar hormonal exposure without VTE, independently of the presence or
not of a detectable inherited thrombophilia.
Methods
Design: French multicentre prospective cross-sectional case-control study comparing the
prevalence of VTE in first-degree relatives (subjects) of young women with VTE during
hormonal exposure (propositus) with the prevalence of VTE in first-degree relatives
(subjects) of young women without VTE during a similar hormonal exposure (propositus).
Objectives
- Primary objective: to demonstrate an association between the risk of VTE in young women
on hormonal exposure (estrogen-containing pill or pregnancy) and the presence of e
previous VTE in their first-degree relatives.
- Secondary objectives:
- To determine if this there is an influence of a detectable inherited minor
thrombophilia (factor V Leiden, G20210A prothrombin variant) on the risk of VTE in
first-degree relatives
- To determine if this there is an influence of a detectable inherited major
thrombophilia (protein, S or antithrombin deficiency) on the risk of VTE in
first-degree relatives
- To determine the impact of the clinical characteristics of VTE in their
first-degree relatives (age, dead or alive at the time of inclusion)
- To determine the impact of clinical characteristic of VTE in the propositus (age,
PE vs DVT, severity of VTE, type of hormonal exposure) on the risk of VTE in the
first-degree relatives.
Main risk factor: the presence of VTE in young women on hormonal exposure.
Primary outcome: the presence of a previous symptomatic VTE in first-degree relatives.
Definitions
- cases are first-degree relatives (i.e., parents, siblings, children) of young women who
have VTE during hormonal exposure;
- controls are first-degree relatives (i.e., parents, siblings, children) of young women
who did not have VTE during a similar hormonal exposure;
- study subjects are first-degree relatives
- propositi are young women on hormonal exposure, whether VTE was present of not
- hormonal exposure is defined by estrogen-containg pill exposure (ongoing or stopped from
less than 3 months) or pregnancy or post-partum (in the three months following
delivery), in the absence of other provoking risk factors (such as surgery, prolonged
immobilization or trauma of lower limbs in the past three months, or cancer in the past
2 years)
Study population
Eligibility criteria:
- Propositi with objectively confirmed proximal deep vein thrombosis (i.e. ultrasonography)
or pulmonary embolism (i.e. lung scanning) in women (18 to 50 years) while on hormonal
exposure.
Inclusion criteria
- cases are first-degree relatives (i.e., parents, siblings, children) of young women (18
to 50 years) who have VTE during hormonal exposure;
- controls are first-degree relatives (i.e., parents, siblings, children) of young women
(18 to 50 years) who did not have VTE during a similar hormonal exposure;
- the propositus is willing to provide written informed consent to participate in the
study and to allow at least one of their first-degree relatives to be approached for the
study;
- First-degree relatives are eligible as study subjects if they are: a biological child,
full sibling or biological parent of an index case; at least 16 years of age; and if
they provided informed consent. * Exclusion criteria
- first-degree relative where the propositus had thromboprophylaxis during hormonal
exposure or had VTE in association with other provoking risk factors (surgery, trauma,
prolonged immobilization, cancer, as defined above)
- No information can be obtained on first degree family members.
- Family member under 16 years of age.
- Vulnerable person other than minors aged 16 to 18 (person placed in guardianship,
curatorship)
- Not affiliated with and not beneficiary of a health insurance scheme. * First-degree
relatives who were dead could be included as study subjects provided the index case
agreed, and information about previous VTE was available.
Index cases will be enrolled prospectively at six university hospitals in France when they
will be diagnosed with a acute episode of acute symptomatic VTE.
Matching criteria
First degree relatives "cases" will matched (1:1) with first-degree relatives "controls" via
their propositi characteristics based on the following keys:
- age ±2 years
- hormonal exposure (pregnancy or estrogen-containing pill)
- tobacco smoking
- BMI
Previous VTE in First-Degree Relatives
- Using a previously described algorithm, first-degree relatives were classified as "have
had VTE" if they satisfied either of the following two criteria. First, results of
diagnostic testing were available that documented previous deep vein thrombosis
(including thrombosis confined to the distal deep veins) or pulmonary embolism. Second,
they had, in addition to a history of symptoms suggestive of VTE, at least one of the
following: i) a history of having been treated with anticoagulant therapy for at least
two months without another indication; or ii) a current ultrasound examination that
showed that the proximal deep veins were not fully compressible or that there was reflux
in a popliteal vein; or iii) current symptoms and signs suggestive of the
post-thrombotic syndrome (defined as a score ≥5 on the Villalta scale).
- Relatives were classified as "have not had VTE" if they satisfied all of the following
criteria: 1) no known or suspected previous diagnosis of VTE; and 2) no unexplained
anticoagulation in the past; and 3) did not currently have symptoms or signs suggestive
of the post thrombotic syndrome (i.e., had a score <5 on the Villalta scale).
- Relatives were classified as "uncertain for previous VTE" if they did not satisfy the
criteria for either previous, or no previous, VTE.
Factor V Leiden and the Prothrombin 20210A Gene Variant After first-degree relatives had
completed assessments for previous VTE, their index cases will categorized as positive for
factor V Leiden or the prothrombin 20210A gene variant, or negative for both. Personnel who
will be unaware of the propositus family history of VTE, or the subject's past history of
VTE, will perfome these assays in a central laboratory in France.
Ethic committee:
IRB was obtain in July, 7th 2017 (CPP méditerranée Sud V). The study is expected to start in
september 2017.
Statistics:
- sample size: in our previous work, the prevalence of previous VTE in first-degree
relative of young women with unprovoked (no surgery, no trauma, no immobilization and no
cancer) VTE that occurred before 50 years was 9.5% as compared the 5.5% observed in
first-degree relatives of young women who had VTE before 50 years with one of these
provoking risk factors. For an alpha risk of 5% and a beta risk of 80%, 1000 cases of
200 propositi with VTE and 1000 controls of 2000 propositi without VTE are required;
taking in account the proportion of 10% of first-degree relatives that should be
classified as "uncertain for VTE", 2200 first degree relatives of 440 propositi are
required.
- VTE prevalence will compared between cases and controls using a conditional logistic
regression in univariate then in multivariate analysis. A random intercept will be also
introduced to account for the clustering effect within families (intra-family
correlation).
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