Low Prevalence of the Factor V Leiden Mutation Among “Severe” Hemophiliacs with a “Milder” Bleeding Diathesis

1995 ◽  
Vol 74 (05) ◽  
pp. 1255-1258 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arnaldo A Arbini ◽  
Pier Mannuccio Mannucci ◽  
Kenneth A Bauer

SummaryPatients with hemophilia A and B and factor levels less than 1 percent of normal bleed frequently with an average number of spontaneous bleeding episodes of 20–30 or more. However there are patients with equally low levels of factor VIII or factor IX who bleed once or twice per year or not at all. To examine whether the presence of a hereditary defect predisposing to hypercoagulability might play a role in amelio rating the hemorrhagic tendency in these so-called “mild severe” hemophiliacs, we determined the prevalence of prothrombotic defects in 17 patients with hemophilia A and four patients with hemophilia B selected from 295 and 76 individuals with these disorders, respectively, followed at a large Italian hemophilia center. We tested for the presence of the Factor V Leiden mutation by PCR-amplifying a fragment of the factor V gene which contains the mutation site and then digesting the product with the restriction enzyme Mnll. None of the patients with hemophilia A and only one patient with hemophilia B was heterozygous for Factor V Leiden. None of the 21 patients had hereditary deficiencies of antithrombin III, protein C, or protein S. Our results indicate that the milder bleeding diathesis that is occasionally seen among Italian hemophiliacs with factor levels that are less than 1 percent cannot be explained by the concomitant expression of a known prothrombotic defect.

2005 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 339-342 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nur Buyru ◽  
Julide Altinisik ◽  
Goksel Somay ◽  
Turgut Ulutin

Several studies indicate a high prevalence of factor V Leiden mutation as the most frequent coagulation defect found in patients with venous thrombosis. The relationship between this mutation and cerebrovascular disease has not been established in adults. In this investigation, we studied 29 patients with ischemic stroke and 20 with intracerebral hemorrhage, all of whom were compared with 20 controls. A region of the factor V gene containing the Leiden mutation site was amplified with polymerase chain reaction and the presence of mutation was determined with restriction enzyme digestion. We found no evidence of an association between factor V Leiden mutation and ischemic stroke or intracerebral hemorrhage. There was no evidence of association in subgroup the analysis by age, smoking status, myocardial infarction, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, or coronary disease. Factor V Leiden mutation doesn’t seem to be associated with a risk of cerebrovascular disease.


Author(s):  
A.A. Abrishamizadeh

Ischemic stroke (IS) is a common cause of morbidity and mortality with significant socioeconomic impact especially when it affects young patients. Compared to the older adults, the incidence, risk factors, and etiology are distinctly different in younger IS. Hypercoagulable states are relatively more commonly detected in younger IS patients.Thrombophilic states are disorders of hemostatic mechanisms that result in a predisposition to thrombosis .Thrombophilia is an established cause of venous thrombosis. Therefore, it is tempting to assume that these disorders might have a similar relationship with arterial thrombosis. Despite this fact that 1-4 % of ischemic strokes are attributed to Thrombophillia, this   alone rarely causes arterial occlusions .Even in individuals with a positive thrombophilia screen and arterial thrombosis, the former might not be the primary etiological factor.Thrombophilic   disorders can be broadly divided into inherited or acquired conditions. Inherited thrombophilic states include deficiencies of natural anticoagulants such as protein C, protein S, and antithrombin III (AT III) deficiency, polymorphisms causing resistance to activated protein C(Factor V Leiden mutation), and disturbance in the clotting balance (prothrombin gene 20210G/A variant). Of all the inherited  thrombophilic disorders, Factor V Leiden mutation is perhaps the commonest cause. On the contrary, acquired thrombophilic disorders are more common and include conditions such as the antiphospholipid syndrome, associated with lupus anticoagulant and anticardiolipin antibodies.The more useful and practical approach of ordering various diagnostic tests for the uncommon thrombophilic states tests should be determined by a detailed clinical history, physical examination, imaging studies and evaluating whether an underlying hypercoagulable state appears more likely.The laboratory thrombophilia   screening should be comprehensive and avoid missing the coexisting defect and It is important that a diagnostic search protocol includes tests for both inherited and acquired thrombophilic disorders.Since the therapeutic approach (anticoagulation and thrombolytic therapy) determines the clinical outcomes, early diagnosis of the thrombophilic  disorders plays an important role. Furthermore, the timing of test performance of some of the  thrombophilic  defects (like protein C, protein S, antithrombin III and fibrinogen levels) is often critical since these proteins can behave as acute phase reactants and erroneously elevated levels of these factors may be observed in patients with acute thrombotic events. On the other hand, the plasma levels of vitamin K-dependent proteins (protein C, protein S and APC resistance) may not be reliable in patients taking vitamin K antagonists. Therefore, it is suggested that plasma-based assays for these disorders should be repeated3 to 6 months after the initial thrombotic episode to avoid false-positive results and avoid unnecessary prolonged   anticoagulation therapy. The assays for these disorders are recommended after discontinuation of oral anticoagulant treatment or heparin for at least 2 weeks.    


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.


2012 ◽  
Vol 111 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sirisha Emani ◽  
David Zurakowski ◽  
Christopher Baird ◽  
Frank Pigula ◽  
Trenor Cameron ◽  
...  

Thrombosis is a crucial contributor of morbidity and mortality in neonates undergoing cardiac surgery. Although there is published data on several factors of the hemastatic system, there is no data correlating factor expression and/or function with thrombosis in neonates. We tested the hypothesis that hypercoagulability markers are predictive of thrombosis in neonates undergoing cardiac surgery. Sixty neonates undergoing cardiac surgery were tested for thrombin generation assay; coagulation factors; antithrombin III, protein C, protein S, and factor VIII; fibrinolytic inhibitors; thrombin-activatable fibrinolytic inhibitor, plasminogen activator inhibitor; and presence of cardiolipin antibodies by immunoassays. Factor V Leiden mutation was also tested in a few patients utilizing single nucleotide polymorphism assays. In this pilot study, thrombosis occurred in 15% of the neonates undergoing cardiac surgery. Significant risk factors associated with thrombosis were pre-mature birth, use of cardio pulmonary bypass, and single ventricle physiology. Hypercoagulability factors associated with thrombosis determined by univarent analysis were elevated thrombin generation, enhanced expression of thrombin-activatable fibrinolytic inhibitor and plasminogen activator inhibitor as well as presence of cardiolipin antibodies and factor V Leiden mutation. No correlation was observed between thrombosis and expression of coagulation factors antithrombin III, protein C, protein S, and factor VIII. Multivarient analysis has proven to show thrombin generation, thrombin-activatable fibrinolytic inhibitor, and presence of cardiolipin antibodies as multivariable predictors of thrombosis. These significant hypercoagulability markers are independent predictors of thrombosis. Thus thrombosis predictability can help in post-operative management and care for neonates undergoing cardiac surgery by regulating pro- and/or anti-coagulation therapy.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 4164-4164
Author(s):  
Qingqi Jiang ◽  
Judith Andersen

Abstract Background: Both inherited and acquired thrombophilia predispose pregnant women to venous thromboembolism and recurrent fetal loss. The safety profile and tolerability of low molecular heparin (LWMH) has allowed us to evaluate effects of anticoagulation in the outcome of pregnancy in patients with thrombophilia. Methods: 20 patients with thrombophilia received either tinzaparin or enoxaparin combined with aspirin before and during pregnancy and the outcome of pregnancy was monitored for a period of 2 years. The median age of the patients was 28 years (25–49); 75% were Caucasians, 20% were aferican-american, 5% were others. The inherited and acquired thrombophilias include Factor V leiden mutation, prothrombin mutation in G20210A, mutation in methylenetetrahydrofolate (MTHFR), protein S deficiency, protein C deficiency, hyperhomocyteinemia, antiphospholipid syndrome, sticky platelet syndrome, etc. The majority of patients had more than 2 thrombophilia factors and had history of miscarriage. 15 of 20 patients (75%) received tinzaparin and 4 of 20 (20%) patients received enxoparin subcutaneously before they were conceived. Only one patient received unfractionated heparin. The LWMH was continued during pregnancy until 34 to 36 weeks gestation when it was changed to unfractionated heparin in order to prevent large amount of bleeding from upcoming delivery. All of the patients also received aspirin prior, during, and after the pregnancy. There were 21 live births including one triplet and one twins. Only two patients were complicated with miscarriage. There was no episode of severe bleeding or thromboembolism during pregnancy or postpartum. Conclusion: LWMH and aspirin has been effective in the prevention of fetal loss in women with thrombophilia disorders.


2010 ◽  
Vol 104 (09) ◽  
pp. 618-625 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min Ki ten Kate ◽  
Hanneke Kluin-Nelemans ◽  
André Mulder ◽  
René Mulder

SummaryConflicting data have been reported on the accuracy of protein S (PS) assays for detection of hereditary PS deficiency. In this study we assessed the diagnostic performance of two total PS antigen assays, four free PS assays and three PS activity assays in a group of 28 heterozygous carriers of mutations in PROS1 and 165 control subjects. Several control groups were formed, one of healthy volunteers and – because PS levels are influenced by oral contraception and pregnancy, and assays measuring PS activity may be influenced by the presence of the factor V Leiden mutation -, we also investigated the influences of these factors. All nine PS assays detected significantly reduced PS levels in subjects with a PROS1 mutation. Eight out of nine PS assays showed a 100% sensitivity and 100% specificity to detect heterozygous carriers of mutations in PROS1 with values far below the lower limit of the reference values obtained from healthy volunteers. Low specificities were found in subjects with a factor V Leiden mutation and in pregnant women. At lower cutoff levels, equal to the highest PS value found in heterozygous carriers of mutations in PROS1, the specificity considerably increased in these subjects. When using low cut-off levels equal to the highest PS value found in heterozygous carriers of mutations in PROS1, ensuring 100% sensitivity, the specificity in all study groups increases considerably, by which misclassification can be maximally avoided.


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