Epidemiological analysis of all vena cava filter placement over 9 years in Brazil: trends and mortality rates in a population of over 200 million

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Abstract

Background

Venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a major global health concern, with inferior vena cava filters (VCFs) serving as an alternative to anticoagulation in high-risk patients. Brazil’s VCF trends remain understudied, particularly in its dual public-private healthcare system. This database study allows a broad overview of the Brazilian healthcare landscape.

Methods

This retrospective nationwide analysis used Brazilian public (SUS/TabNet) and private (ANS/D-TISS) healthcare databases (2015–2023) to assess VCF placement rates, regional disparities and in-hospital mortality. Data included 21,630 procedures, analyzed via generalized linear models (Gamma/Poisson distributions).

Results

The private system performed 57% of VCFs (12,323) despite covering only 25% of the population, with a 4.25-fold higher procedure rate per capita than the public system (29.45 vs. 6.42 per million). Women accounted for 57.8% of recipients. The Southeast region dominated (70% private, 40.5% public), while the North and Midwest had the lowest rates. Mortality rates were comparable (public 6.7% vs. private 7.4%, p = 0.066), peaking during COVID-19. Procedure volumes rose 140% over 9 years, contrasting with declining U.S. trends post-FDA restrictions.

Conclusions:

Brazil’s VCF use reflects systemic inequities, with private-system overrepresentation and regional gaps. This study enables unprecedented insights into large-scale VCF implementation across diverse healthcare subsystems.

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