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G. Grimnes et al.
Table 3. Hospital contacts and measurements of C-reactive protein (CRP) in hazard (H) and control periods (C1-C4).
H C1
C2 C3C4
Number of hospital contacts
Number of cases with CRP measurements
CRPa (mg/L), median (25-perc, 75-perc)
(3-0 months) N=707
560
298
107 (25, 195)
(18-15 months) N=707
165 75
8 (5, 61)
(15-12 months) N=707
172 72
7 (5, 23)
(12-9 months) N=707
187
86
15 (5, 94)
(9-6 months) N=707
199
96
16 (5, 85.5)
aMaximum CRP, with measurements the last two days before date of VTE excluded.
Table 4. Association of C-reactive proteina with risk of venous thromboembolism
βb (95% CI) 0.58 (0.39-0.77)
0.44 (0.01-0.87) 0.57 (0.20-0.94) OR (95% CI)
1.79 (1.48-2.16) 1.55 (1.01-2.38) 1.77 (1.22-2.57)
Hazard period compared to control periods Adjusted for immobilization
βb (95% CI)
0.51 (0.31-0.70) 0.45 (-0.02-0.92) 0.57 (0.18-0.96) OR (95% CI)
1.66 (1.37-2.02) 1.57 (0.98-2.51) 1.77 (1.20-2.60)
Adjusted for infection βb (95% CI)
All cases
Cases with infection Cases without infection
All cases
Cases with infection
0.40 (0.19-0.61)
-
-
OR (95% CI)
1.50 (1.21-1.85)
1248
Cases without infection
- -
OR:odds ratio,CI:confidence interval.aNatural log transformed C-reactive protein.bWhen multiplied by 100, β coefficients can be interpreted as percentage difference compared
with the reference group.
baseline CRP and VTE was only present in cases suffering a VTE within the first year after baseline.10 We found a similar time-dependent pattern between another inflam- mation marker, the neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (NLR), and VTE risk in the Tromsø study cohort.11 There was no association between NLR and risk of VTE after a median follow-up time of 17.7 years, but when follow-up time was restricted to the first 3 years, those with the highest baseline NLR had a 2.4-fold increased risk of VTE. Taken together, these studies suggest that acute and augmented inflammation rather than longstanding, low-grade inflammation is associated with VTE risk.
Accordingly, in this case-crossover study, we found that acute inflammation assessed by CRP was associated with increased risk of VTE. Acute infection, a strong trigger of inflammation, is a risk factor for VTE, and higher CRP- levels are expected in patients with acute infections.16,17,21 After adjustment for infection, and in analyses stratified for infection, increased serum levels of CRP were still associated with increased VTE risk, also in cases without infection. Thus, our findings suggest that inflammatory responses caused by non-infectious conditions, such as cancer, surgery, acute medical conditions and trauma, can partly explain the VTE risk related to these conditions. Immobilization may accompany these conditions, and thereby act as a confounder for the observed association. However, in our study the risk estimates remained essen- tially similar after adjustment for immobilization.
The risk of VTE has been shown to be highest the first two weeks following an infection, and to gradually decline thereafter.16,17 In our study, there was no trend of a change in risk estimates according to time between the hazard and control periods. This further supports that acute inflammation of short duration is more important for the VTE risk. Some chronic inflammatory conditions,
such as autoimmune disorders and rheumatic diseases, also carry increased risk of VTE. However, the risk of VTE in patients with inflammatory bowel disease, for example, is especially high during disease flare-ups, where acute inflammation dominates.22 Furthermore, in a population- based cohort study on VTE risk in patients with psoriasis and rheumatoid arthritis (RA), patients with severe psori- asis and RA-patients in need of a disease modifying anti- rheumatic drug (DMARD) had higher estimated risk of VTE than those not prescribed DMARDs.23
Inflammation and coagulation are closely linked.24 Inflammation can be triggered by infection, tissue injury or tissue stress and malfunction.25 Of these triggers, inflammation induced by infection has been best charac- terized. Extensive crosstalk exists between the coagula- tion and the complement cascades, and complement acti- vation enhances coagulation through increased tissue fac- tor (TF) expression and by inhibition of fibrinolysis.26 Anticoagulant activity by the protein C- pathway is down-regulated by inflammatory cytokines.27 TF expres- sion increases in response to inflammatory cytokines and through recruitment from microvesicles and monocytes induced by P-selectin.28 Activated neutrophils secrete neu- trophil extracellular traps (NETs), composed of proteins and decondensed chromatin.29 In addition to an important role in neutralizing and killing microbes, NETs also con- tribute to coagulation and platelet aggregation.30 NET for- mation occurs not only in response to infection, but also in sterile inflammatory processes and in metastatic can- cer.30
CRP is an acute-phase protein rapidly synthesized mainly in the liver under control by inflammatory cytokines, and CRP levels cease rapidly when the stimuli for production is diminished.31 CRP has no diurnal varia- tion, is unaffected by eating, and drugs reducing CRP typ-
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