Absolute and Relative Risks of Hematologic Disease and Cause-Specific Death in Individuals with Incidentally Discovered Thrombocytopenia: A Prospective Study of Two Independent General Population Cohorts Including 486,782 Individuals from the United Kingdom and Denmark

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Absolute and Relative Risks of Hematologic Disease and Cause-Specific Death in Individuals with Incidentally Discovered Thrombocytopenia: A Prospective Study of Two Independent General Population Cohorts Including 486,782 Individuals from the United Kingdom and Denmark. / Juhl, Anne Rudbeck; Glenthoej, Andreas; Nordestgaard, Boerge Groenne; Petersen, Jesper; Dahl, Morten; Ellervik, Christina; Bojesen, Stig Egil; Helby, Jens.

I: Blood, Bind 142, Nr. Supplement 1, 2023, s. 395.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Juhl, AR, Glenthoej, A, Nordestgaard, BG, Petersen, J, Dahl, M, Ellervik, C, Bojesen, SE & Helby, J 2023, 'Absolute and Relative Risks of Hematologic Disease and Cause-Specific Death in Individuals with Incidentally Discovered Thrombocytopenia: A Prospective Study of Two Independent General Population Cohorts Including 486,782 Individuals from the United Kingdom and Denmark', Blood, bind 142, nr. Supplement 1, s. 395. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2023-173792

APA

Juhl, A. R., Glenthoej, A., Nordestgaard, B. G., Petersen, J., Dahl, M., Ellervik, C., Bojesen, S. E., & Helby, J. (2023). Absolute and Relative Risks of Hematologic Disease and Cause-Specific Death in Individuals with Incidentally Discovered Thrombocytopenia: A Prospective Study of Two Independent General Population Cohorts Including 486,782 Individuals from the United Kingdom and Denmark. Blood, 142(Supplement 1), 395. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2023-173792

Vancouver

Juhl AR, Glenthoej A, Nordestgaard BG, Petersen J, Dahl M, Ellervik C o.a. Absolute and Relative Risks of Hematologic Disease and Cause-Specific Death in Individuals with Incidentally Discovered Thrombocytopenia: A Prospective Study of Two Independent General Population Cohorts Including 486,782 Individuals from the United Kingdom and Denmark. Blood. 2023;142(Supplement 1):395. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2023-173792

Author

Juhl, Anne Rudbeck ; Glenthoej, Andreas ; Nordestgaard, Boerge Groenne ; Petersen, Jesper ; Dahl, Morten ; Ellervik, Christina ; Bojesen, Stig Egil ; Helby, Jens. / Absolute and Relative Risks of Hematologic Disease and Cause-Specific Death in Individuals with Incidentally Discovered Thrombocytopenia: A Prospective Study of Two Independent General Population Cohorts Including 486,782 Individuals from the United Kingdom and Denmark. I: Blood. 2023 ; Bind 142, Nr. Supplement 1. s. 395.

Bibtex

@article{7959b5943e184e7fa7887d3f14c40f07,
title = "Absolute and Relative Risks of Hematologic Disease and Cause-Specific Death in Individuals with Incidentally Discovered Thrombocytopenia: A Prospective Study of Two Independent General Population Cohorts Including 486,782 Individuals from the United Kingdom and Denmark",
abstract = "Background:Incidentally discovered thrombocytopenia in asymptomatic individuals often result in a referral to hematology. Clinical decisions for these individuals are mostly based on local practice, as little evidence exists on their risk of hematologic disease and death. We aim to lay ground for an evidence-based clinical approach to incidental thrombocytopenia with or without concurrent anemia by studying relative and absolute risk of being diagnosed with hematologic disease, death from hematologic disease and death from any cause.Methods:We studied 382,424 general population individuals from the United Kingdom (UK) Biobank aged 40-70 years, of whom 9,151 had thrombocytopenia with or without anemia. Individuals with leukocytosis, neutropenia or prior hematologic disease were excluded. As a validation cohort, we studied 104,358 Danish general population individuals. All individuals attended a health examination and had platelets, hemoglobin, leukocyte and differential count measured at study enrolment. Individuals were followed prospectively for up to 16 years for hematologic disease and cause-specific death using national registries, covering all deaths and almost all cancer cases in the UK and Denmark.Results:Among 382,424 individuals from the UK, 6,044 had hematologic disease during follow-up, 28,403 died from any cause and 1,213 died due to hematologic disease. For all analyses, the reference group was individuals with normal platelet count and normal hemoglobin.",
author = "Juhl, {Anne Rudbeck} and Andreas Glenthoej and Nordestgaard, {Boerge Groenne} and Jesper Petersen and Morten Dahl and Christina Ellervik and Bojesen, {Stig Egil} and Jens Helby",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1182/blood-2023-173792",
language = "English",
volume = "142",
pages = "395",
journal = "Blood",
issn = "0006-4971",
publisher = "American Society of Hematology",
number = "Supplement 1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Absolute and Relative Risks of Hematologic Disease and Cause-Specific Death in Individuals with Incidentally Discovered Thrombocytopenia: A Prospective Study of Two Independent General Population Cohorts Including 486,782 Individuals from the United Kingdom and Denmark

AU - Juhl, Anne Rudbeck

AU - Glenthoej, Andreas

AU - Nordestgaard, Boerge Groenne

AU - Petersen, Jesper

AU - Dahl, Morten

AU - Ellervik, Christina

AU - Bojesen, Stig Egil

AU - Helby, Jens

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Background:Incidentally discovered thrombocytopenia in asymptomatic individuals often result in a referral to hematology. Clinical decisions for these individuals are mostly based on local practice, as little evidence exists on their risk of hematologic disease and death. We aim to lay ground for an evidence-based clinical approach to incidental thrombocytopenia with or without concurrent anemia by studying relative and absolute risk of being diagnosed with hematologic disease, death from hematologic disease and death from any cause.Methods:We studied 382,424 general population individuals from the United Kingdom (UK) Biobank aged 40-70 years, of whom 9,151 had thrombocytopenia with or without anemia. Individuals with leukocytosis, neutropenia or prior hematologic disease were excluded. As a validation cohort, we studied 104,358 Danish general population individuals. All individuals attended a health examination and had platelets, hemoglobin, leukocyte and differential count measured at study enrolment. Individuals were followed prospectively for up to 16 years for hematologic disease and cause-specific death using national registries, covering all deaths and almost all cancer cases in the UK and Denmark.Results:Among 382,424 individuals from the UK, 6,044 had hematologic disease during follow-up, 28,403 died from any cause and 1,213 died due to hematologic disease. For all analyses, the reference group was individuals with normal platelet count and normal hemoglobin.

AB - Background:Incidentally discovered thrombocytopenia in asymptomatic individuals often result in a referral to hematology. Clinical decisions for these individuals are mostly based on local practice, as little evidence exists on their risk of hematologic disease and death. We aim to lay ground for an evidence-based clinical approach to incidental thrombocytopenia with or without concurrent anemia by studying relative and absolute risk of being diagnosed with hematologic disease, death from hematologic disease and death from any cause.Methods:We studied 382,424 general population individuals from the United Kingdom (UK) Biobank aged 40-70 years, of whom 9,151 had thrombocytopenia with or without anemia. Individuals with leukocytosis, neutropenia or prior hematologic disease were excluded. As a validation cohort, we studied 104,358 Danish general population individuals. All individuals attended a health examination and had platelets, hemoglobin, leukocyte and differential count measured at study enrolment. Individuals were followed prospectively for up to 16 years for hematologic disease and cause-specific death using national registries, covering all deaths and almost all cancer cases in the UK and Denmark.Results:Among 382,424 individuals from the UK, 6,044 had hematologic disease during follow-up, 28,403 died from any cause and 1,213 died due to hematologic disease. For all analyses, the reference group was individuals with normal platelet count and normal hemoglobin.

U2 - 10.1182/blood-2023-173792

DO - 10.1182/blood-2023-173792

M3 - Journal article

VL - 142

SP - 395

JO - Blood

JF - Blood

SN - 0006-4971

IS - Supplement 1

ER -

ID: 386601804