Comparison of VTE prophylaxis agents on hemoglobin levels after total knee arthroplasty: a hospital information system-based observational study
Research article published in Journal of orthopaedic surgery and research (2025)
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While venous thromboembolism (VTE) prophylaxis is crucial following major orthopaedic surgeries including total knee arthroplasty (TKA), the impact of different prophylactic agents on postoperative hemoglobin (Hb) levels remains inadequately studied. The aim of this study was to compare the effects of aspirin, rivaroxaban, and low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) on early postoperative Hb changes following TKA. METHODS: In this single-center retrospective cohort study, 655 primary TKAs were finally included using data from the hospital information system. Patients received either aspirin, rivaroxaban, or LMWH for VTE prophylaxis. The primary outcome was the magnitude of Hb reduction, calculated as the difference between the Hb level on the first postoperative day and the minimum postoperative Hb level before discharge. The secondary outcome was the trajectory of postoperative Hb changes within the first week. RESULTS: Postoperative Hb levels clearly declined within the first week, with a mean of 13.9 g/L (SD, 8.5) from postoperative day 1 in the entire cohort. In the fully adjusted linear regression model, both rivaroxaban (β = 1.5, [95%CI, 0.0 to 3.0]) and low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) (β = 3.3, [95%CI, 1.5 to 5.2]) were associated with a greater reduction in Hb compared to aspirin. Regarding the trajectory of postoperative Hb changes, the generalized additive mixed model revealed no statistically significant difference between rivaroxaban and aspirin (β = -0.2, [95%CI, -0.6 to 0.2]). LMWH was associated with a greater daily reduction in Hb levels relative to aspirin, averaging 0.8 g/L per day (β = -0.8, [95%CI, -1.3 to -0.3]). Despite these observed differences, the effect sizes were small, suggesting a lack of clinical significance. CONCLUSIONS: Hemoglobin levels declined significantly following TKA within the first week after surgery. However, no clinically meaningful distinction is discernible between the three most frequently used pharmacological agents, aspirin, rivaroxaban and LMWH. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: III, A retrospective cohort study.
Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.
Summary
Peer-reviewed safety and infection-control research relevant to leech therapy and microsurgical wound management. Indexed in PubMed and verified against the NCBI record.
Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy
This single-center retrospective cohort of 655 primary total knee arthroplasties compared aspirin, rivaroxaban, and low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) for VTE prophylaxis, measuring early postoperative hemoglobin decline; although rivaroxaban and LMWH were statistically associated with slightly greater Hb reduction than aspirin, the authors judged the effect sizes small and concluded there was no clinically meaningful difference among the three agents. For hirudotherapy, the study is useful context on the bleeding/blood-loss tradeoffs of systemic anticoagulants in the same surgical and microvascular-congestion settings where medicinal leeching is sometimes used as a local adjunct rather than a systemic anticoagulant. As a retrospective, single-center cohort graded Level III evidence by the authors, it shows association rather than causation, examines pharmacologic prophylaxis only, and says nothing directly about leech therapy.
Citation
Comparison of VTE prophylaxis agents on hemoglobin levels after total knee arthroplasty: a hospital information system-based observational study.
Yuan et al. · Journal of orthopaedic surgery and research, 2025
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