An Epidemiological Study of the Haemostatic and Other Effects of Oral Contraceptives

Abstract
Summary. Factors V, VII and VIII (each determined by biological assay), fibrinogen, platelet count and adhesiveness, and fibrinolytic activity were measured in 234 white pre‐menopausal women, of whom 57 (24%) were on oral contraceptives and 177 (76%) were not. Cholesterol, triglyceride and blood pressure levels were also recorded. In 20 of the women on oral contraceptives, and in an age‐matched group of 20 who were not, prothrombin, factor X, antithrombin III and α2‐macroglobulin levels were determined, and factors VII and VIII were also measured immunologically. For the majority of the variables studied, the differences between those using and not using oral contraceptives were greater in younger than older women; in the case of factor VII (biological assay) and fibrinogen, the differences between the regression slopes on age were statistically significant, and mean values were substantially higher in those on oral contraceptives. There was also a significant difference between regression slopes on age for cholesterol. Mean levels of prothrombin, factors VII (immunological assay) and X, triglycerides and blood pressure were significantly higher, and mean levels of antithrombin III significantly lower, in those on oral contraceptives compared with those not. Overall, fibrinolytic activity was significantly higher in the women on oral contraceptives; this difference was, however, almost entirely due to the greatly increased fibrinolytic activity of the non‐smokers on oral contraceptives, activity in the smokers on oral contraceptives being similar to that of the women not on these preparations. There were no significant differences in mean platelet count or adhesiveness, or in haemoglobin, packed cell volume, uric acid and blood sugar levels. Among the women on oral contraceptives, there was a significant negative correlation between factor VIII and fibrinolytic activity; this was largely due to five women all of blood groups A and B, in whom, besides high factor‐VIII levels and poor fibrinolytic activity, other variables (e.g. fibrinogen) were raised in a direction that might be expected to favour thrombogenesis. It is possible that it is those women whose fibrinolytic activity does not increase in order to compensate for the effects of oral contraceptives on clotting factors, lipids and blood pressure, who are at special risk of thromboembolic episodes. The differential effects of oral contraceptives by age must be borne in mind in evaluating the effects of these preparations on the haemostatic and lipid systems.