The Effect of Adrenaline Infusions on Blood Coagulation in Normal and Haemophilia B Dogs

1966 ◽  
Vol 15 (03/04) ◽  
pp. 349-364 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.H Özge ◽  
H.C Rowsell ◽  
H.G Downie ◽  
J.F Mustard

SummaryThe addition of trace amounts of adrenaline to whole blood in plasma in vitro increased factor VIII, factor IX and whole plasma activity in the thromboplastin generation test. This was dose dependent.Adrenaline infusions less than 22 (μg/kg body weight in normal dogs accelerated clotting, increased factor IX, factor VIII and whole plasma activity in the thromboplastin generation test and caused a fall in blood pH. In a factor IX deficient dog, there was no increase in factor IX activity. After adrenaline infusions, however, the other changes occurred and were of the same order of magnitude as in the normal. Adrenaline in doses greater than 22 μg/kg body weight did not produce as great an effect on clotting in normal or factor IX deficient dogs. The platelet count in the peripheral blood was increased following the infusion of all doses of adrenaline. These observations suggest that the accelerating effect of adrenaline on clotting is not mediated through increase in activity of a specific clotting factor.

Blood ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 715-720
Author(s):  
GF Gjerset ◽  
PJ Martin ◽  
RB Counts ◽  
LD Fast ◽  
JA Hansen

We evaluated 37 patients with moderate or severe hemophilia A and six patients with severe factor IX deficiency for clinical or laboratory evidence of immune abnormalities. Patients were assigned to one of four groups according to the type of clotting factor replacement. Twenty patients had received only cryoprecipitate during the two years preceding the evaluation (group I); 11 additional patients were treated predominantly with cryoprecipitate but had also received up to nine bottles of factor VIII concentrate (group II); six patients received factor VIII concentrate (group III); six patients received factor IX concentrate (group IV). There was no clinical or laboratory evidence of immunodeficiency among the 43 patients. The mean absolute number of Th cells was normal in all patient groups, but the mean absolute number of Ts cells was increased compared with controls, both in patients treated with cryoprecipitate and in patients treated with factor VIII or factor IX concentrate. There was no correlation between the Th/Ts ratio and patient age, alanine aminotransferase level, hepatitis serology, in vitro lymphocyte function, or amount of clotting factor administered. Our observations demonstrate that the volunteer or commercial origin of clotting factor replacement cannot fully explain the alterations in lymphocyte subset distribution previously described in patients with hemophilia A.


Blood ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 715-720 ◽  
Author(s):  
GF Gjerset ◽  
PJ Martin ◽  
RB Counts ◽  
LD Fast ◽  
JA Hansen

Abstract We evaluated 37 patients with moderate or severe hemophilia A and six patients with severe factor IX deficiency for clinical or laboratory evidence of immune abnormalities. Patients were assigned to one of four groups according to the type of clotting factor replacement. Twenty patients had received only cryoprecipitate during the two years preceding the evaluation (group I); 11 additional patients were treated predominantly with cryoprecipitate but had also received up to nine bottles of factor VIII concentrate (group II); six patients received factor VIII concentrate (group III); six patients received factor IX concentrate (group IV). There was no clinical or laboratory evidence of immunodeficiency among the 43 patients. The mean absolute number of Th cells was normal in all patient groups, but the mean absolute number of Ts cells was increased compared with controls, both in patients treated with cryoprecipitate and in patients treated with factor VIII or factor IX concentrate. There was no correlation between the Th/Ts ratio and patient age, alanine aminotransferase level, hepatitis serology, in vitro lymphocyte function, or amount of clotting factor administered. Our observations demonstrate that the volunteer or commercial origin of clotting factor replacement cannot fully explain the alterations in lymphocyte subset distribution previously described in patients with hemophilia A.


1979 ◽  
Vol 42 (05) ◽  
pp. 1355-1367 ◽  
Author(s):  
C V Prowse ◽  
A Chirnside ◽  
R A Elton

SummaryVarious factor IX concentrates have been examined in a number of in vitro tests of thrombogenicity. The results suggest that some tests are superfluous as in concentrates with activity in any of these tests activation is revealed by a combination of the non-activated partial thromboplastin time, the thrombin (or Xa) generation time and factor VIII inhibitor bypassing activity tests. Assay of individual coagulant enzymes revealed that most concentrates contained more factor IXa than Xa. However only a small number of concentrates, chiefly those that had been purposefully activated, contained appreciable amounts of either enzyme.


Blood ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 73 (2) ◽  
pp. 438-445
Author(s):  
TD Palmer ◽  
AR Thompson ◽  
AD Miller

Inherited diseases might be treated by introducing normal genes into a patient's somatic tissues to correct the genetic defects. In the case of hemophilia resulting from a missing clotting factor, the required gene could be introduced into any cell as long as active factor reached the circulation. We previously showed that retroviral vectors can efficiently transfer genes into normal skin fibroblasts and that the infected cells can produce high levels of a therapeutic product in vitro. In the current study, we examined the ability of skin fibroblasts to secrete active clotting factor after infection with different retroviral vectors encoding human clotting factor IX. Normal human fibroblasts infected with one vector secreted greater than 3 micrograms factor IX/10(6) cells/24 h. Of this protein, greater than 70% was structurally and functionally indistinguishable from human factor IX derived from normal plasma. This suggests that infected autologous fibroblasts might provide therapeutic levels of factor IX if transplanted into patients suffering from hemophilia B. By transplanting normal diploid fibroblasts infected with the factor IX vectors, we showed that human factor IX can be produced and is circulated at readily detectable levels in rats and mice.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 17-17
Author(s):  
Dougald Monroe ◽  
Mirella Ezban ◽  
Maureane Hoffman

Background.Recently a novel bifunctional antibody (emicizumab) that binds both factor IXa (FIXa) and factor X (FX) has been used to treat hemophilia A. Emicizumab has proven remarkably effective as a prophylactic treatment for hemophilia A; however there are patients that still experience bleeding. An approach to safely and effectively treating this bleeding in hemophilia A patients with inhibitors is recombinant factor VIIa (rFVIIa). When given at therapeutic levels, rFVIIa can enhance tissue factor (TF) dependent activation of FX as well as activating FX independently of TF. At therapeutic levels rFVIIa can also activate FIX. The goal of this study was to assess the role of the FIXa activated by rFVIIa when emicizumab is added to hemophilia A plasma. Methods. Thrombin generation assays were done in plasma using 100 µM lipid and 420 µM Z-Gly-Gly-Arg-AMC with or without emicizumab at 55 µg/mL which is the clinical steady state level. The reactions were initiated with low (1 pM) tissue factor (TF). rFVIIa was added at concentrations of 25-100 nM with 25 nM corresponding to the plasma levels achieved by a single clinical dose of 90 µg/mL. To study to the role of factor IX in the absence of factor VIII, it was necessary to create a double deficient plasma (factors VIII and IX deficient). This was done by taking antigen negative hemophilia B plasma and adding a neutralizing antibody to factor VIII (Haematologic Technologies, Essex Junction, VT, USA). Now varying concentrations of factor IX could be reconstituted into the plasma to give hemophilia A plasma. Results. As expected, in the double deficient plasma with low TF there was essentially no thrombin generation. Also as expected from previous studies, addition of rFVIIa to double deficient plasma gave a dose dependent increase in thrombin generation through activation of FX. Interestingly addition of plasma levels of FIX to the rFVIIa did not increase thrombin generation. Starting from double deficient plasma, as expected emicizumab did not increase thrombin generation since no factor IX was present. Also, in double deficient plasma with rFVIIa, emicizumab did not increase thrombin generation. But in double deficient plasma with FIX and rFVIIa, emicizumab significantly increased thrombin generation. The levels of thrombin generation increased in a dose dependent fashion with higher concentrations of rFVIIa giving higher levels of thrombin generation. Conclusion. Since addition of FIX to the double deficient plasma with rFVIIa did not increase thrombin generation, it suggests that rFVIIa activation of FX is the only source of the FXa needed for thrombin generation. So in the absence of factor VIII (or emicizumab) FIX activation does not contribute to thrombin generation. However, in the presence of emicizumab, while rFVIIa can still activate FX, FIXa formed by rFVIIa can complex with emicizumab to provide an additional source of FX activation. Thus rFVIIa activation of FIX explains the synergistic effect in thrombin generation observed when combining rFVIIa with emicizumab. The generation of FIXa at a site of injury is consistent with the safety profile observed in clinical use. Disclosures Monroe: Novo Nordisk:Research Funding.Ezban:Novo Nordisk:Current Employment.Hoffman:Novo Nordisk:Research Funding.


2020 ◽  
Vol 40 (S 01) ◽  
pp. S15-S20
Author(s):  
Jens Müller ◽  
Georg Goldmann ◽  
Natascha Marquardt ◽  
Bernd Pötzsch ◽  
Johannes Oldenburg

AbstractDue to structural differences between extended half-life (EHL) factor VIII (FVIII) or FIX products and equivalent plasma wild-type molecules used for assay calibration, reagent-dependent discrepancies during monitoring of FVIII- and FIX-replacement therapies with EHL products have been described. To assess the performance of available one-stage clotting and chromogenic substrate assays on the Siemens Atellica COAG 360 analyzer, an in vitro study using spiked plasma samples was performed. The described results confirm previously described findings and allowed allocation of each EHL product to an appropriate assay. In addition, corresponding EHL product–specific analytes were defined within the order entry system of the University Hospital Bonn. The requirement of product-specific FVIII and FIX assays complicates patient monitoring and demonstrates the need for both continuous education and communication between treating physicians and the coagulation laboratory.


1979 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.V. Prowse ◽  
A.R. Williams

A method has been developed whereby aerial blood samples can be obtained from a rabbit over a period of four hours following infusion of potentially thrombogenic solutions. Infusion of 50 uAg thrombin over JO minutes produced intravascular coagulation for up to three hours after infusion as demonstrated by a decrease in factor VIII, increase in partial thromboplastin time and fibrin(ogen) degradation producta and a positive ethanol gelation teat. No change in fibrinogen, factor DC or platelet count was found. Saline infusion produced no change in any of these parameters.Infusion of a variety of factor IX concentrates at 100 u/kg shewed that those concentrates active in in vitro thrombogenicity teste produced a similar effect to thrombin in vivo and in addition may result in a drop in platelet count. Infesion of concentrates with low in vitro activity did not induce intravascular coagulation.


Blood ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 73 (2) ◽  
pp. 438-445 ◽  
Author(s):  
TD Palmer ◽  
AR Thompson ◽  
AD Miller

Abstract Inherited diseases might be treated by introducing normal genes into a patient's somatic tissues to correct the genetic defects. In the case of hemophilia resulting from a missing clotting factor, the required gene could be introduced into any cell as long as active factor reached the circulation. We previously showed that retroviral vectors can efficiently transfer genes into normal skin fibroblasts and that the infected cells can produce high levels of a therapeutic product in vitro. In the current study, we examined the ability of skin fibroblasts to secrete active clotting factor after infection with different retroviral vectors encoding human clotting factor IX. Normal human fibroblasts infected with one vector secreted greater than 3 micrograms factor IX/10(6) cells/24 h. Of this protein, greater than 70% was structurally and functionally indistinguishable from human factor IX derived from normal plasma. This suggests that infected autologous fibroblasts might provide therapeutic levels of factor IX if transplanted into patients suffering from hemophilia B. By transplanting normal diploid fibroblasts infected with the factor IX vectors, we showed that human factor IX can be produced and is circulated at readily detectable levels in rats and mice.


Blood ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 65 (2) ◽  
pp. 492-495 ◽  
Author(s):  
JJ Goedert ◽  
MG Sarngadharan ◽  
ME Eyster ◽  
SH Weiss ◽  
AJ Bodner ◽  
...  

Abstract The third member of the family of T cell leukemia viruses (HTLV III) has been proposed as the primary etiologic agent of the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). A high risk of AIDS has been reported among patients with hemophilia, particularly those with factor VIII deficiency who receive commercial clotting factor concentrates. In a prevalence survey conducted between September 1982 and April 1984, initial serum samples from 74% of hemophiliacs who had ever been treated with commercial factor VIII concentrate, 90% of those frequently treated with factor VIII concentrate, and 50% of those treated with both factor VIII and factor IX concentrates had antibodies reactive against antigens of HTLV III, compared with none of the hemophiliacs treated only with factor IX concentrate or volunteer donor plasma or cryoprecipitate. Two of the seropositive patients have developed AIDS-related illnesses, and a third patient died of bacterial pneumonia. One initially seronegative patient developed antibodies against HTLV III during the study and is currently well. The predominant antibody specificities appear directed against p24 and p41, the presumed core and envelope antigens of HTLV III, suggesting that factor VIII concentrate may transmit the p24 and p41 antigens of HTLV III. However, the presence of infectious retroviruses in clotting factor concentrates and the effectiveness of screening and viral neutralization procedures remain to be determined.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 496-496 ◽  
Author(s):  
Junjiang Sun ◽  
Narine Hakobyan ◽  
Leonard A. Valentino ◽  
Paul E. Monahan

Abstract Hemophilic arthropathy is the major morbidity of congenital factor VIII and IX deficiency. Therapies localized to hemophilic joints could provide adjunctive protection, in addition to that provided by systemic factor replacement. However, the ability of extravascular clotting factors to contribute to hemostatic protection within joint tissue is unknown. We hypothesized that replacing deficient factor VIII or IX within the injured joint capsule of mice with hemophilia A (FVIII −/ −) or hemophilia B (FIX −/ −), respectively, would decrease the progression of synovitis. We developed a bleeding model consisting of a unilateral knee joint capsule needle puncture to induce hemorrhage in hemophilic mice. Pathology of the joint at two weeks after the injury is graded 0 to 10 using a murine hemophilic synovitis grading system (Valentino, Hakobyan. Haemophilia, 2006). Hemostatically normal mice do not develop synovitis following this injury, but > 95% of FIX −/ − mice develop bleeding and synovitis with a mean grade of 3–4 or greater. Coincident with needle puncture, recombinant human coagulation factor doses ranging from 0 to 20 IU/kg body weight of factor IX or 0 to 25 IU/kg of factor VIII were instilled intraarticularly (I.A.). Comparison groups received the same injury and intravenous (I.V.) factor IX or VIII doses of 25 IU/kg to 100 IU/kg (n= 4–7 mice per study group). Joint bleeding phenotype of the two strains of mice was similar. Mice receiving only saline injection at the time of needle puncture developed mean synovitis scores of 5 ±0.5 in the FVIII −/ − mice and 6 ±0.5 in the FIX −/ − mice. Protection by human clotting factor in the mouse coagulation system was incomplete; mice receiving 100 IU/kg I.V. of factor VIII or factor IX developed synovitis scores of 2.6 ± 1.7 and 2.1 ± 0.2, respectively. In contrast, pathology grade of FVIII −/ − mice dosed with 25 IU/kg I.A. was 0.67 ± 0.3 (p = 0.05 for comparison of 25 IU/kg I.A. with 100 IU/kg IV); FIX−/ − mice receiving 20 IU/kg I.A. had synovitis scores of 0.45 ± 0.58 (p < 0.01 for comparison of 25 IU/kg I.A. with 100 IU/kg I.V.). We next ruled out the possibility that I.A. factor was entering the circulation, and via that route resulting in joint protection, either through technical error at the time of injection, or from a depot effect in the joint with late equilibration into the circulation. Additional groups of mice received factor VIII or IX intravenously at 100 IU/kg, or intraarticularly at 4 times the doses used in the hemarthrosis challenge (80 IU/kg FIX or 100 IU/kg FVIII), and factor activity assays were performed at 1, 4, 12, 24, and 48 hours. Expected circulation kinetics were seen following I.V. dosing; no increase in circulating factor VIII or IX activity were seen in the intraarticular dosing groups at any timepoint. In considering the potential immunogenicity of an intraarticular therapy approach for hemophilic joint therapy, factor VIII −/ − mice were treated with three doses of human factor VIII 100 IU/kg at five day intervals either I.V. or I.A. At two weeks after exposure, 5/5 I.V.-treated mice developed inhibitor antibodies with titers ranging 0.8–7.2 BU; 2/5 I.A.-treated mice had detectable low-titer antibodies (1.3 BU), indicating no greater immunogenicity in the I.A. model. Extravascular factor VIII and factor IX can contribute to protection against blood-induced joint deterioration; enhancing local tissue hemostasis with protein or gene therapy may prove a useful adjunct to systemic replacement.


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