The differential risk of oral contraceptives: the impact of full exposure history
K D MacRae, Michael A. O. Lewis, Dörthe Kühl-Habich1, Dörthe Kühl-Habich, D Kühl-Habichl, Lothar Heinemann, Walter O. Spitzer*, R Bruppacher, W O Spitzer
Previous discussions have indicated that the small increases of risk of venous thromboembolism (VTE) associated with newer combined oral contraceptives (third generation, containing desogestrel and gestodene) may be attributed to bias due to cohort effects. In a case-control analysis, this may produce an overestimate of risk of newer preparations. In 10 centres in Germany and the UK, the Transnational Study analysed data from 502 women aged 16-44 years with VTE, and from 1864 controls matched for 5-year age group and region. Information on lifetime exposure history from all subjects was added to the dataset used in previous analyses and entered into a Cox regression model with time-dependent covariates. Based on 17 622 continuous exposure episodes comprising 47 914 person-years of observation, the adjusted hazard ratio (equivalent to odds ratio, OR) of VTE for the comparison of current users of third-generation versus current users of second-generation (primarily levonorgestrel compounds) combined oral contraceptives was 0.8 (0.5 to 1.3). The OR obtained in standard case-control analysis had been 1.5 (1.1 to 2.1). Adjustment for past exposures includes more information and appears more valid than the standard cross-sectional analysis. Using this approach, the Transnational Study data show no evidence for an increased risk of VTE with thirdcompared with second-generation combined oral contraceptives.
oral contraceptives venous thromboembolism third generation second generation risk, desogestrel gestodene VTE risk combined oral contraceptives, oral contraceptive generation comparison venous thromboembolism case-control, Cox regression time-dependent covariates oral contraceptive exposure history, levonorgestrel third generation pill thrombosis risk bias, Transnational Study oral contraceptives VTE Lewis Spitzer, cohort effect bias oral contraceptive venous thromboembolism studies, lifetime oral contraceptive exposure history VTE risk adjustment, combined oral contraceptive formulation safety comparison thrombosis, full exposure history oral contraceptive differential risk assessment
PMID 10359554 10359554 DOI 10.1093/humrep/14.6.1493 10.1093/humrep/14.6.1493
Cite this article
Lewis, M. A., MacRae, K. D., Kühl-Habichl, D., Bruppacher, R., Heinemann, L. A., & Spitzer, W. O. (1999). The differential risk of oral contraceptives: the impact of full exposure history. *Human reproduction (Oxford, England)*, *14*(6), 1493-1499. https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/14.6.1493
Lewis MA, MacRae KD, Kühl-Habichl D, Bruppacher R, Heinemann LA, Spitzer WO. The differential risk of oral contraceptives: the impact of full exposure history. Hum Reprod. 1999;14(6):1493-1499. doi:10.1093/humrep/14.6.1493
Lewis, M. A., et al. "The differential risk of oral contraceptives: the impact of full exposure history." *Human reproduction (Oxford, England)*, vol. 14, no. 6, 1999, pp. 1493-1499.
Todd J et al., 1999Human Reproduction (Oxford, England)
In October 1995 the Committee on Safety of Medicines advised UK doctors and pharmacists that oral contraceptives containing desogestrel and gestodene were associated with double the risk of venous thr...
Background: Four studies published since December, 1995, reported that the incidence of venous thromboembolism (VTE) was higher in women who used oral contraceptives (OCs) containing the third-generat...
Contraception/Comparison > Oral Contraceptives > Venous Thromboembolism RiskContraception/Comparison > Safety > Third vs Second Generation ProgestagensResearch Methodology > Study Design > Confounding and Bias in Observational Studies
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