RT Journal A1 Iorio A, Kearon C, Filippucci E, et al T1 Risk of recurrence after a first episode of symptomatic venous thromboembolism provoked by a transient risk factor: A systematic review JF Archives of Internal Medicine JO Archives of Internal Medicine YR 2010 FD October 25 VO 170 IS 19 SP 1710 OP 1716 DO 10.1001/archinternmed.2010.367 UL http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archinternmed.2010.367 AB Background  We aimed to determine the risk of recurrence for symptomatic venous thromboembolism (VTE) provoked by different transient risk factors.Data Sources  MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Cochrane Collaboration Registry of Randomized Trials databases were searched.Study Selection  Prospective cohort studies and randomized trials of patients with a first episode of symptomatic VTE provoked by a transient risk factor and treated for at least 3 months were identified.Data Extraction  Number of patients and recurrent VTE during the 0- to 12-month and 0- to 24-month intervals after stopping therapy, study design, and provoking risk factor characteristics were extracted.Data Synthesis  Annualized recurrence rates were calculated and pooled across studies. At 24 months, the rate of recurrence was 3.3% per patient-year (11 studies, 2268 patients) for all patients with a transient risk factor, 0.7% per patient-year (3 studies, 248 patients) in the subgroup with a surgical factor, and 4.2% per patient-year (3 studies, 509 patients) in the subgroup with a nonsurgical factor. In the same studies, the rate of recurrence after unprovoked VTE was 7.4% per patient-year. The rate ratio for a nonsurgical compared with a surgical factor was 3.0 and for unprovoked thrombosis compared with a nonsurgical factor was 1.8 at 24 months.Conclusions  The risk of recurrence is low if VTE is provoked by surgery, intermediate if provoked by a nonsurgical risk factor, and high if unprovoked. These risks affect whether patients with VTE should undergo short-term vs indefinite treatment.