Different Incidence of Venous Thrombosis in Patients with Inherited Deficiencies of Antithrombin III, Protein C and Protein S

1994 ◽  
Vol 71 (01) ◽  
pp. 015-018 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Finazzi ◽  
T Barbui

SummaryA cohort study was undertaken to compare the incidence of thrombosis in patients with inherited deficiency of Antithrombin III (n = 9), Protein C (n = 36) and Protein S (n = 36). The patients were stratified for schedule of antithrombotic prophylaxis and followed for a total period of 160 patient-years. Seven venous thrombosis were observed for a total incidence of 4.3% pts.-ys. The incidence of thrombosis was not significantly different in patients of different age, sex and schedule of prophylaxis, although there was a trend to a lower incidence in young individuals and in those receiving long-term oral anticoagulation. Patients with AT III deficiency had an higher incidence of thrombosis than patients with Protein C or Protein S deficiency (12 vs. 2.8 vs. 3.3% pts.-ys., p <0.05), despite the fact that they were, on average, younger and more prophylaxed. This study suggests that congenital Antithrombin III deficiency constitutes a greater risk of thrombosis than congenital deficiences of Protein C and Protein S.

1988 ◽  
Vol 59 (01) ◽  
pp. 018-022 ◽  
Author(s):  
C L Gladson ◽  
I Scharrer ◽  
V Hach ◽  
K H Beck ◽  
J H Griffin

SummaryThe frequency of heterozygous protein C and protein S deficiency, detected by measuring total plasma antigen, in a group (n = 141) of young unrelated patients (<45 years old) with venous thrombotic disease was studied and compared to that of antithrombin III, fibrinogen, and plasminogen deficiencies. Among 91 patients not receiving oral anticoagulants, six had low protein S antigen levels and one had a low protein C antigen level. Among 50 patients receiving oral anticoagulant therapy, abnormally low ratios of protein S or C to other vitamin K-dependent factors were presented by one patient for protein S and five for protein C. Thus, heterozygous Type I protein S deficiency appeared in seven of 141 patients (5%) and heterozygous Type I protein C deficiency in six of 141 patients (4%). Eleven of thirteen deficient patients had recurrent venous thrombosis. In this group of 141 patients, 1% had an identifiable fibrinogen abnormality, 2% a plasminogen abnormality, and 3% an antithrombin III deficiency. Thus, among the known plasma protein deficiencies associated with venous thrombosis, protein S and protein C. deficiencies (9%) emerge as the leading identifiable associated abnormalities.


1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
A W Broekmans ◽  
F J M der Meer ◽  
K Briët

Hereditary antithrombin III deficiency,protein C deficiency, and protein S deficiency predispose to the occurrence of venous thrombotic disease at a relatively youngage and often without an apparent cause. These disorders inherit as an autosomal dominant trait. Heterozygotes are at risk fosuperficial thrombophlebitis, thrombosis atnearly every venous site, and pulmonary embolism. Homozygous protein C deficiency may present itself with a purpura fulminans syndrome shortly after birth.In the acute phase of venous thromboembolism heparin is effective for preventing extension of the thrombotic process, and pulmonary embolism. In patients with antithrombin III deficiency the concomittant useof antithrombin III concentrate is controversial, although some patients may requirehigher doses of heparin.Substitution therapy is only indicated in homozygous protein C deficient patientswith purpura fulminans. Fresh frozen plasma i.v. is the treatment of choice, in a dosage of 10 ml/kg once or twice daily. The current prothrombin complex concentrates may induce new skin lesions and disseminated intravascular coagulation. After the lesions have been healed(mostly in 4 to6 weeks)coumarin therapy may effectively prevent new episodes of purpura fulminans, provided the prothrombin time is kept within 2,5 - 4,0 INR. Heparin is ineffective for preventing purpura fulminans due to homozygous protein C deficiency.The thrombotic manifestations in heterozygotes are effectively prevented by coumarin therapy. This is supported by the observation that patients may remain free of thrombosis during long-term treatment and may have recurrences shortly after the withdrawal of the coumarin drug. The therapeutic range for the prothrombin time should be within 2,0 - 4,0 INR, target value 3,0 INR. In the initial phase of oral anticoagulant therapy protein C deficient patients are prone to the development of coumarin induced hemorrhagic skin (tissue) necrosis.In the patients studied in Leiden, it occurred in about 3% of the treated patients. Heparin appears to be ineffective for the prevention of coumarin-induced skin necrosis; high loading doses of coumarin should be avoided and the prothrombin timeshouldbe checked dialy during the initial phase of oral anticoagulant treatment. Tissue necrosis may contribute to bleeding complications after fibrinolytic therapy, ashas been observed in two protein C deficient patients.In clinical situations with an increased risk for thrombosis such as surgery and pregnancy, heparin (in-low-doses) alone orin combination with coumarins have been used succesfully for the prevention of thrombosis. The need for antithrombin III concentrates in patients with hereditary antithrombin III deficiency in such situations is not substantiated.Although anabolic steroids are capable to increase the plasma concentrations of antithrombin III and of protein C in the respective deficiency states, its efficacy in preventing thrombotic episodes remains to be established.An optimal strategy for preventing thrombosis in congenital thrombotic syndromes is to identify still asymptomatic patients. In case of antithrombin III, protein C, and protein S deficiency this search is feasible. During risk situations for thrombosis patients are to be protected against the development of thrombosis.In Leiden pregnant women with one of the deficiencies are treated from the 14th week of pregnancy, initially with a shortacting coumarin drug, after the 34th week withheparin s.c. b.i.d. at therapeutic dosages,and after delivery coumarin therapy is reTnstituted during 6 weeks. The use of oralcontraceptives should be avoided, unlesspatients are under coumarin treatment. As long as deficient patients remain asymptomatic no antithrombotic treatment is indicated. After the first documented thromboticincident patients are treated indefinitelywith oral anticoagulants.


2002 ◽  
Vol 22 (02) ◽  
pp. 57-66
Author(s):  
I. Witt

ZusammenfassungDie enormen Fortschritte in der Molekularbiologie in den letzten Jahren ermöglichten sowohl die Aufklärung der Nukleotidsequenzen der Gene für Antithrombin III (AT III), Protein C (PROC) und Protein S (PROS) als auch die Identifizierung zahlreicher Mutationen bei hereditären Defekten dieser wichtigen Inhibitoren des plasmatischen Gerinnungssystems. Da die Gene für AT III (13,8 kb) und PROC (11,2 kb) nicht groß und relativ leicht zu analysieren sind, gibt es bereits umfangreiche »databases« der Mutationen (50, 73). Für AT III sind 79 und für PROC 160 unterschiedliche Mutationen beschrieben.Sowohl beim AT-III-Mangel als auch beim Protein-C-Mangel hat die Mutationsaufklärung neue Erkenntnisse über die Struktur-Funktions-Beziehung der Proteine gebracht. Beim Protein-C-Mangel steht die klinische Relevanz der DNA-Analyse im Vordergrund, da die Diagnostik des Protein-C-Mangels auf der Proteinebene nicht immer zuverlässig möglich ist.Das Protein-S-Gen ist für die Analytik schwer zugänglich, da es groß ist (80 kb) und außerdem ein Pseudogen existiert. Es sind schon zahlreiche Mutationen bei Patienten mit Protein-S-Mangel identifiziert worden. Eine Database ist bisher nicht publiziert. Die klinische Notwendigkeit zur Mutationsaufklärung besteht ebenso wie beim Protein-C-Mangel. Es ist zu erwarten, dass zukünftig die Identifizierung von Mutationen auch beim Protein-S-Mangel beschleunigt vorangeht.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 4111-4111
Author(s):  
Damanjit K. Ghuman ◽  
Alice J. Cohen

Abstract The association of genetic risk factors with hypercoagulable states in minority populations has not been well defined. With an estimated prevalence of anywhere between 2-15% in healthy individuals, activated protein C resistance (APCR/Factor V Leiden) is considered to be the most common risk factor for venous thromboembolism( VTE) in the white population. It has also been postulated that this mutation is extremely rare in non-white populations. The prevalence of the prothrombin gene mutation G20210A in the white population is estimated at 0.7–4%, protein C and S deficiencies at 2% each and antithrombin III deficiency at 0.1–0.5% but unknown in Blacks with VTE though case control studies have identified protein C and protein S deficiencies in this population. This study is a retrospective review of all patients with thrombophilia registered at the Hemophilia Treatment Center between 1999–2005. 45/164(27%) of patients with thrombophilia were identified to be from minority groups. Of these minority patients 23/45(51%) had an identifiable primary hypercoagulable state. This group included 7/23(30%) males and 16/23(70%) females. The mean age of the patients was 35 years (range 12–80 years ). 4/23( 17%) were smokers and only 4/23(17%) had a family history of thrombosis with no documented hypercoagulable states in any family members. The majority of the patients were of African American descent 16/23(69%), 5/23(22%) were Hispanic and 2/23(9%) were Asians. 16/23(69%) of the patients had documented deep venous thrombosis/pulmonary embolus, 1/23(4%) had arterial thrombosis, 3/23(13%) had fetal loss, and 2/23(9%) were asymptomatic. APCR was the most common diagnosis in 8/23(35%) of the patients, followed by antiphospholipid antibody syndrome in 7/23(30%) of the patients. Protein S deficiency was diagnosed in 5/23(22%), hyperhomocysteinemia in 4/23(17%), Protein C deficiency in 1/23(4%), antithrombin III in 1/23(4%), and prothrombin gene mutation in 1/23(4%) of the patients. 4/23(17%) of the patients were found to have two coexisting hypercoagulable diagnoses. Recurrent VTE occurred in 7/23(30%) of the patients. Conclusion: Primary hypercoagulable states are not rare in minorities. In this study, APCR was found to be the most common identified abnormality, followed by antiphospholipid antibody and protein S deficiency. Similar to the white population, thrombophilia in minorities occurred more commonly in young female patients. Work up for primary hypercoagulable states should be considered in minority patients with unexplained thrombosis. Further studies are warranted to determine the true prevalence of hypercoagulable states in minority populations.


1999 ◽  
Vol 82 (08) ◽  
pp. 662-666 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandra J. Hasstedt ◽  
Mark F. Leppert ◽  
George L. Long ◽  
Edwin G. Bovill

IntroductionNearly 150 years ago, Virchow postulated that thrombosis was caused by changes in the flow of blood, the vessel wall, or the composition of blood. This concept created the foundation for subsequent investigation of hereditary and acquired hypercoagulable states. This review will focus on an example of the use of modern genetic epidemiologic analysis to evaluate the multigenic pathogenesis of the syndrome of juvenile thrombophilia.Juvenile thrombophilia has been observed clinically since the time of Virchow and is characterized by venous thrombosis onset at a young age, recurrent thrombosis, and a positive family history for thrombosis. The pathogenesis of juvenile thrombophilia remained obscure until the Egeberg observation, in 1965, of a four generation family with juvenile thrombophilia associated with a heterozygous antithrombin deficiency subsequently identified as antithrombin Oslo (G to A in the triplet coding for Ala 404).1,2 The association of a hereditary deficiency of antithrombin III with thrombosis appeared to support the hypothesis, first put forward by Astrup in 1958, of a thrombohemorrhagic balance.3 He postulated that there is a carefully controlled balance between clot formation and dissolution and that changes in conditions, such as Virchow’s widely encompassing triad, could tip the balance toward thrombus formation.The importance of the thrombohemorrhagic balance in hypercoagulable states has been born out of two lines of investigation: evidence supporting the tonic activation of the hemostatic mechanism and the subsequent description of additional families with antithrombin deficiency and other genetically abnormal hemostatic proteins associated with inherited thrombophilia. Assessing the activation of the hemostatic mechanism in vivo is achieved by a variety of measures, including assays for activation peptides generated by coagulation enzyme activity. Activation peptides, such as prothrombin fragment1+2, are measurable in normal individuals, due to tonic hemostatic activity and appear elevated in certain families with juvenile thrombophilia.4 In the past 25 years since Egeberg’s description of antithrombin deficiency, a number of seemingly monogenic, autosomal dominant, variably penetrant hereditary disorders have been well established as risk factors for venous thromboembolic disease. These disorders include protein C deficiency, protein S deficiency, antithrombin III deficiency, the presence of the factor V Leiden mutation, and the recently reported G20210A prothrombin polymorphism.5,6 These hereditary thrombophilic syndromes exhibit considerable variability in the severity of their clinical manifestations. A severe, life-threatening risk for thrombosis is conferred by homozygous protein C or protein S deficiency, which if left untreated, leads to death.7,8 Homozygous antithrombin III deficiency has not been reported but is also likely to be a lethal condition. Only a moderate risk for thrombosis is conferred by the homozygous state for factor V Leiden or the G20210A polymorphism.9,10 In contrast to homozygotes, the assessment of risk in heterozygotes, with these single gene disorders, has been complicated by variable clinical expression in family members with identical genotypes.11 Consideration of environmental interactions has not elucidated the variability of clinical expression. Consequently, it has been postulated that more than one genetic risk factor may co-segregate with a consequent cumulative or synergistic effect on thrombotic risk.12 A number of co-segregating risk factors have been described in the past few years. Probably the best characterized interactions are between the common factor V Leiden mutation, present in 3% to 6% of the Caucasian population,13,14 and the less common deficiencies of protein C, protein S, and antithrombin III. The factor V Leiden mutation does not, by itself, confer increased risk of thrombosis. The high prevalence of the mutation, however, creates ample opportunity for interaction with other risk factors when present.The G20210A prothrombin polymorphism has a prevalence of 1% to 2% in the Caucasian population and, thus, may play a similar role to factor V Leiden. A number of small studies have documented an interaction of G20210A with other risk factors.15-17 A limited evaluation of individuals with antithrombin III, protein C, or protein S deficiency revealed a frequency of 7.9% for the G20210A polymorphism, as compared to a frequency of 0.7% for controls.18 The G20210A polymorphism was observed in only 1 of the 6 protein C-deficient patients.18 In the present state, the elucidation of risk factors for venous thromboembolic disease attests to the effectiveness of the analytical framework constructed from the molecular components of Virchow’s triad, analyzed in the context of the thrombohemorrhagic balance hypothesis. Two investigative strategies have been used to study thromobophilia: clinical case-control studies and genetic epidemiologic studies. The latter strategy has gained considerable utility, based on the remarkable advances in molecular biology over the past two decades. Modern techniques of genetic analysis of families offer important opportunities to identify cosegregation of risk factors with disease.19 The essence of the genetic epidemiologic strategy is the association of clinical disease with alleles of specific genes. It is achieved either by the direct sequencing of candidate genes or by demonstration of linkage to genetic markers.


1994 ◽  
Vol 71 (05) ◽  
pp. 548-552 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ingrid Pabinger ◽  
Barbara Schneider ◽  
I Scharrer ◽  
V Hach-Wunderle ◽  
K Lechner ◽  
...  

SummaryThe thrombotic risk of women with a heterozygous natural clotting inhibitor deficiency taking oral contraceptives (OC) has not been evaluated. Therefore, a retrospective collaborative controlled cohort-study was carried out in 8 coagulation laboratories and thrombosis units in Austria, Germany and Switzerland.The incidence of thromboembolism in 48 females heterozygous for hereditary type I deficiency of antithrombin ITT (n = 1.5), protein C. (n = 16) or protein S (n = 17), who had taken OC at least once in their life were compared with that of 48 deficient women, who had never taken OC (controls). Diagnosis of the deficiency state was made in the participating centers. Data on the onset and duration of OC intake and the date and site of thrombotic events were obtained from a questionnaire filled in by the patient or a physician during a visit at a participating center. The observation period in the OC patients was started with onset of OC intake and was terminated when a thromboembolic event had occurred or when OC medication were discontinued. In the patients without OC, the observation period began at an age matched to that of the OC patient and ended when a thromboembolic event had occurred or was continued as long as the corresponding OC patient was on treatment.In AT Ill-deficient females the probability for thrombosis was significantly higher for patients taking OC compared to the non-OC-patients (Wilcoxon test p = 0.004, Log Rank test p = 0.005). In patients with protein C- ((3-error 0.8) and protein S-deficiency ((3-error 0.05) there was no significant difference between the OC- and non-OC-group. The incidence of thrombosis/patient year in AT III-, PC- and PS-deficient females on OC was 27.5%, 12% and 6.5%, respectively and 3.4%, 6.9% and 8.6%, respectively, in the control patients.We conclude that females with hereditary antithrombin Ill-deficiency are at high risk for venous thromboembolism when taking OC. Therefore, OC should be strictly avoided in these females and AT III measurement is mandatory in female relatives of AT Ill-deficient patients at young age before starting OC. There is no evidence for an excess thrombotic risk by OC intake in PS-deficient females. In protein C-deficient women OC medication was not associated with a significant increase of thrombosis, but an increased risk cannot be excluded.


1994 ◽  
Vol 14 (04) ◽  
pp. 199-208
Author(s):  
Irene Witt

ZusammenfassungDie enormen Fortschritte in der Molekularbiologie in den letzten Jahren ermöglichten sowohl die Aufklärung der Nukleotidsequenzen der Gene für Antithrombin III (AT III), Protein C (PROC) und Protein S (PROS) als auch die Identifizierung zahlreicher Mutationen bei hereditären Defekten dieser wichtigen Inhibitoren des plasmatischen Gerinnungssystems. Da die Gene für AT III (13,8 kb) und PROC (11,2 kb) nicht groß und relativ leicht zu analysieren sind, gibt es bereits umfangreiche »databases« der Mutationen (50, 73). Für AT III sind 79 und für RPOC 160 unterschiedliche Mutationen beschrieben.Sowohl beim AT-Ill-Mangel als auch beim Protein-C-Mangel hat die Mutationsaufklärung neue Erkenntnisse über die Struktur-Funktions-Beziehung der Proteine gebracht. Beim Protein-C-Mangel steht die klinische Relevanz der DNA- Analyse im Vordergrund, da die Diagnostik des Protein-C-Mangels auf der Proteinebene nicht immer zuverlässig möglich ist.Das Protein-S-Gen ist für die Analytik schwer zugänglich, da es groß ist (80 kb) und außerdem ein Pseudogen existiert. Es sind schon zahlreiche Mutationen bei Patienten mit Protein-S-Mangel identifiziert worden. Eine Database ist bisher nicht publiziert. Die klinische Notwendigkeit zur Mutationsaufklärung besteht ebenso wie beim Protein-C-Mangel. Es ist zu erwarten, daß zukünftig die Identifizierung von Mutationen auch beim Protein-S-Mangel beschleunigt vorangeht.


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