Similar Mechanism of Various Lupus Anticoagulants

1985 ◽  
Vol 53 (01) ◽  
pp. 015-018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Exner

SummaryPotent lupus inhibitors from various patients were mixed with platelet free normal plasma and were compared in activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT), dilute prothrombin time (dil. PT), kaolin clotting time (KCT), contact product clotting time (CPCT), and Russell viper venom clotting time (RWCT) tests. In the last three tests platelets and platelet lipid substitutes were avoided to enhance the sensitivities of these tests for the lupus anticoagulant. Correlations between the KCT and the other tests were mostly good, indicating that different lupus inhibitors functioned by a similar mechanism. There was no significant trend between particular clinical symptoms and individual coagulation test combinations. The KCT was found to be the most sensitive test for the lupus inhibitor, followed by the CPCT, RWCT, dil. PT and APTT tests. Activated platelets tended to correct the APTT lupus inhibitor defect in all except the strongest inhibitor cases.

1992 ◽  
Vol 67 (06) ◽  
pp. 672-678 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara M Alving ◽  
Charles F Barr ◽  
Lawrence E Johansen ◽  
Douglas B Tang

SummaryIn the present study, the dilute Russell viper venom time (RVVT) and the dilute phospholipid activated partial thromboplastin time (PL-APTT), which are two assays used for the verification of lupus anticoagulants (LA), were modified to increase standardization. The modified assays were then compared with respect to sensitivity and specificity in detecting LA in plasmas from 72 patients with a prolonged APTT. Modifications included utilizing a single dilution of phospholipid that was either bovine brain thromboplastin (Thrombofax) or liposomes comprised of phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine, and expressing the results as a ratio of the clotting times of the mixture of patient and normal plasma/clotting time of normal plasma. In the RWT, the correlation coefficient between assay results for liposomes and Thrombofax was 0.88 and in the PL-APTT, the correlation was 0.68. A positive test for LA was defined as a ratio of ≥1.3 for the PL-APTT with liposomes and ≥1.2 for the PL-APTT with Thrombofax and the RWT with Thrombofax or liposomes. Regardless of the phospholipid source in the test system, the PL-APTT demonstrated higher sensitivity and the RWT showed greater specificity in detecting patient plasmas that contained antiphospholipid antibodies.


1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Criel ◽  
B Gilbert ◽  
A Van Hoof ◽  
M Hidajat ◽  
A Louwagie

Lupus anticoagulant (LAC) is an antibody directed against phospholipids which prolongs in vitro clotting assays. Several detection methods have been described; however all give some different results. Recently ELISA and RIA assays have been developed which detect IgG and IgM anti-cardiolipin antibodies. The aim of our study was to compare three different LAC tests with an ELISA anti-cardiolipin test. The tests used were : kaolin clotting time (KCT or Exnertest), tissue thromboplastin inhibition test (TTI or Schleider test), activated partial thromboplastin time using a 50, 100, 200 fold dilution of the phospholipid preparation (APTT dilution test), and an IgG and IgM anti-cardiolipin ELISA test. 114 samples of patients suffering from diseases known to be accompanied with LAC antibodies (auto-immune diseases, recurrent abortion, thromboembolism, etc.) were studied. Positivity with one of the tests was found in 45 patients (39%). Patients with the diagnosis of SLE or otherimmune diseases showed the highest positivity (56%) whereas those with thromboembolism, recurrent abortion etc. were only positive in 27%.Among these 45 positive patients the TTI was positive in 41 cases (91 %);however in 10 cases (24 %) this was the only positivity found. The KCT test and the APTT dilution test were both positive in 18 cases (40 %). Anti-cardiolipin antibodies were found in 21 patients (47 %): IgG only in 12 (27 %), IgM only in 5 (11 %), both IgG and IgM in 2 (4 %); in 19 of these 21 patientsthe TTI was also positive.In our study the TTI test seems to be the most sensitive test but possibly also the test with the highest aspecific positivities. IgG and IgM anti-cardiolipin antibodies were less frequently found than expected.


1990 ◽  
Vol 64 (01) ◽  
pp. 026-031 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Arnout ◽  
E Huybrechts ◽  
M Vanrusselt ◽  
C Falcon ◽  
J Vermylen

SummaryClotting assays allow qualitative rather than quantitative detection of the lupus anticoagulant. We have therefore studied the usefulness of an ELISA using a commercial partial thromboplastin, Thrombofax, oS antigen; the results obtained on 146 selected patient plasmas were compared to the results of coagulation tests (kaolin clotting time, tissue thromboplastin inhibition test, activated partial thromboplastin time) and of ELISAs using cardiolipin or phosphatidylserine as antigen. While satisfactory agreement was found within the group of coagulation tests or that of ELISAs, only a moderate agreement was obtained between clotting tests and ELISAs, the best being with the partial thromboplastin ELISA using low plasma dilutions. The study further indicates that ELISA techniques cannot entirely replace coagulation tests for the detection of a lupus anticoagulant, even when a partial thromboplastin is used as antigen. On the other hand, coagulation tests are less sensitive than ELISAs for the detection of antiphospholipid antibodies.


1990 ◽  
Vol 64 (03) ◽  
pp. 478-484 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Exner ◽  
Douglas A Triplett ◽  
David A Taberner ◽  
Margaret A Howard ◽  
E Nigel Harris

SummarySix lyophilized plasma samples were sent to 20 “expert” laboratories for assessment of lupus anticoagulant (LA). Four samples contained pooled LA of graded potency mixed with aged normal plasma. One contained LA plus cephalin phospholipid and one contained a nonspecific venom anticoagulant. Sixteen methods were used overall with some participants using up to 8 methods. Results were scored in regard to the known potencies of LA in the samples and other known induced defects.Activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) tests used by most participants for preliminary screening were relatively sensitive, but non-specific. Platelet or phospholipid neutralization procedures (PNP) appeared to be sensitive and specific but showed a non-linear response to increased LA content. Kaolin clotting time (KCT) tests showed the most sensitive response to increased LA content but the weaker LA were not scored as abnormal by most laboratories as the samples may have contained platelet fragments. Other commonly used tests such as the tissue thromboplastin inhibition (TTI) test and the dilute Russell’s viper venom test (DRVVT) were carried out somewhat inconsistently. The variability in performance of tests in different laboratories indicates that standardization of methodology is urgently required.Generally it seemed that most clotting tests were “bypassed” by the addition of phospholipid to a known LA-positive sample in apparently direct proportion to their sensitivity. Sample preparation, especially prevention of contamination with activated platelets is a vital preliminary part in the assay of LA.


1999 ◽  
Vol 81 (02) ◽  
pp. 256-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Biasiolo ◽  
P. Rampazzo ◽  
T. Brocco ◽  
V. Pengo

SummaryAnti-β2-glycoprotein I (β2-GPI) antibodies behave as classical Lupus Anticoagulants (LA), as they inhibit phospholipid-dependent coagulation reactions and their activity disappears in the presence of excess exogenous phospholipids (PLs). We have recently shown that a certain amount of PLs in the dilute Russell Viper Venom Time (dRVVT) test system is required to express LA activity of anti β2-GPI antibodies. We have now extended this observation to two other tests, i.e., Kaolin Clotting Time (KCT) in which PLs are not added, and Tissue Thromboplastin Inhibition test (TTI) in which PLs are extremely diluted. In fact, affinity-purified antibody preparations from 5 patients with antiphospholipid syndrome did not express or only weakly expressed anticoagulant activity in both tests; the mean ratios of coagulation times obtained with purified antibodies and that of control buffer were 1.11 and 1.0 for KCT and TTI, respectively. On the contrary, the mean ratios in dRVVT were 1.31 and 1.49 at a PLs dilution of 1:8 and 1:64, respectively. Therefore, the presence of LA activity due to autoantibodies to β2-GPI is characterized by a positive dRVVT and negative or only weakly positive KCT and TTI.


2008 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 332-337 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gary W. Moore ◽  
Savita Rangarajan ◽  
Geoffrey F. Savidge

Lupus anticoagulants are a heterogeneous group of autoantibodies detected by their effects on phospholipid-dependent coagulation assays. Persistent lupus anticoagulants are associated with thrombotic disease, but not all are clinically significant. Antibody heterogeneity and reagent and test variability dictate that at least 2 tests, of different types, should be used to screen lupus anticoagulants. The objective of this study was to investigate whether the activated seven lupus anticoagulant assay detects clinically significant antibodies. Eighty-two patients with antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) and 32 with systemic lupus erythematosus + positive for activated seven lupus anticoagulant and who were without thrombosis, who were positive by activated seven lupus anticoagulant assay, were investigated for lupus anticoagulants by dilute Russell's viper venom time, dilute activated partial thromboplastin time, and Taipan snake venom time, and for anticardiolipin antibodies. Fifty-seven of the APS patients were positive for lupus anticoagulants in multiple assays, 25 in activated seven lupus anticoagulant alone. Fourteen of the latter group were previously positive in other antiphospholipid antibodies assays, and 11 had only been positive for lupus anticoagulants by activated seven lupus anticoagulant. Twenty-eight had elevated anticardiolipin antibodies, 6 of whom were from the group that was positive in activated seven lupus anticoagulant only. Eight of the systemic lupus erythematosus + lupus anticoagulants (without thrombosis) patients were positive for lupus anticoagulant by activated seven lupus anticoagulant alone and had only been positive in activated seven lupus anticoagulant previously, and none had elevated anticardiolipin antibodies. The remaining 24 patients were lupus-anticoagulant positive in multiple assays, and 9 had elevated anticardiolipin antibodies. Dilute Russell's viper venom time and Dilute activated partial thromboplastin time are widely used to detect lupus anticoagulants and are considered to detect clinically significant antibodies. Activated seven lupus anticoagulant detected antibodies in APS patients who were positive by these assays and also lupus anticoagulants undetectable by the dilute Russell's viper venom time/dilute activated partial thromboplastin time reagents used, demonstrating its utility as a first-line or second-line assay.


1993 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Thomason ◽  
B Riegel ◽  
D Jessen ◽  
Smith SCJr ◽  
I Gocka ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the clinical safety of heparin titration and the procedural cost of anticoagulation measurement using bedside low-range activated clotting time. DESIGN: Quasi-experimental study using data gathered through retrospective record review. SETTING: Coronary care, medical intensive care and telemetry units of a community hospital. SUBJECTS: Sample of 102 patients undergoing elective percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty. INTERVENTION: Intravenous heparin therapy was titrated using low-range activated clotting time in 51 percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty patients. Data from this group were compared to a matched sample of 51 angioplasty patients whose intravenous heparin therapy was titrated using activated partial thromboplastin time. RESULTS: No differences in procedural, early or late complications were found between the groups. The cost of managing heparin therapy with low-range activated clotting time was less than with activated partial thromboplastin time. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that titrating heparin therapy based on bedside low-range activated clotting time for the angioplasty patients in this sample was as safe as with activated partial thromboplastin time. Use of bedside low-range activated clotting time saved money for the hospital.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 4149-4149
Author(s):  
Harry L. Messmore ◽  
Nancy J. Fabbrini ◽  
Ketty Badrinath ◽  
Richard Harriman ◽  
Omar Iqbal ◽  
...  

Abstract The direct thrombin inhibitors lepirudin and argatroban are widely used to treat heparin induced thrombocytopenia (HIT). It has been suggested that the Ecarin™ (Echis carinatus venom) clotting time may be superior to the activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) for monioring purposes. We have prepared standard curves for lepirudin (Refludan™) and Argatroban covering therapeutic drug levels and corresponding APTT ratios (clotting time/control clotting time). Ecarin™ clotting time ratios were performed to demonstrate the practical application of these curves in the clinical care of patients. We report the case of an 80 year old man with HIT/HITT syndrome that occurred during therapy for deep vein thrombosis (DVT) with a low molecular weight heparin (LMWH). His initial coagulation studies were abnormal due to warfarin and LMWH therapy. The patient had a moderate impairment of renal function. Lepirudin therapy in a bolus dose of 14 mg (patient weight: 103.0 kg) resulted in supratherapeutic blood levels of drug and hematuria (Platelet count: 〉200 x 103). Dosage adjustment to maintain an APTT ratio of 1.5 for five days caused no hematuria, but thromboembolic complications occurred at that ratio. The in-vitro dose response curve for Lepirudin was compared with the Ecarin™ clotting time (ECT) ratio at those same concentration ranges in the same plasma. For comparison, Argatroban dose response curves in-vitro were made as well. ECT ratios were very similar to the APTT ratios in the patient’s samples. Representative ratios after the initial bolus, during the infusion period of five days and at the termination of that period are shown in the following table: Comparison of APTT and ECT Ratios APTT Ratio ECT Ratio 1.43 1.07 3.98 3.08 2.91 1.95 2.74 1.95 2.79 1.90 2.58 1.78 2.44 2.42 3.83 4.78 Conclusion: The ECT ratios reflect a steeper dose response curve than that observed with the APTT ratios. This may permit more accurate measurement of blood levels using ECT ratios.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 4222-4222
Author(s):  
Weihong Tang ◽  
Mary Cushman ◽  
Christine Schwienbacher ◽  
Lorna M López ◽  
Yoav Ben-Shlomo ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4222 Background: Activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) and prothrombin time (PT) are commonly used to screen for coagulation factor deficiencies. Shorter aPTT is also a risk marker for incident and recurrent venous thromboembolism (VTE). Genetic factors influencing aPTT and PT are not well understood. So far only one genome-wide association study (GWAS) has been reported for aPTT in 1,477 participants and none for PT. Methods: We conducted a GWAS for the aPTT in 9,240 European Americans (EAs) from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study and for PT in 1,221 EAs from the Genetic Study of Three Population Microisolates in South Tyrol (MICROS). Replication was assessed by in silico analysis in MICROS (aPTT, n=1,215) and the Lothian Birth Cohorts (LBC) (LBC1936 (aPTT and PT, n=925-989), LBC1921 (aPTT, n=445)), and by de novo genotyping in the Caerphilly study (aPTT, n=882). Subjects on anticoagulants were excluded. Genotyping was conducted with the Affymetrix single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array 6.0 or Illumina HumanHap300/370 and imputed to ∼2.5 million HapMap SNPs. SNPs with imputation quality score < 0.3 or minor allele frequencies ≤1% were excluded from data analysis. The imputed SNP dosages were analyzed in linear regression adjusted for age, sex, and field center, where applicable. Results: Five loci were associated with aPTT at genome-wide significance of p<5×10-8 that have not been previously reported: F5 (1q23, top SNP rs9332701, missense, β (effect size associated with one copy increase in minor allele)=0.54, p=3.7×10-8), F11 (4q35, rs1593, intronic, β =0.54 and 0.36, p=1.25×10-17 and 2.0×10-8 before and after adjusting for known variants in F11), NSD1 (5q35.2-q35.3, rs11950938, intronic, β =1.00 and 1.21, p=1.11×10-15 and 1.5×10-22 before and after adjusting for known variants in F12 of the same region), C6orf10 (6p21.3, rs2050190, intronic, β =-0.25, p=1.3×10-8), and ABO (9q34.1-q34.2, rs8176704, intronic, tag for A2 group, β =0.19 and 0.89, p=0.02 and 4.3×10-24 before and after adjusting for O blood group). Three of the five loci replicated in at least one replication sample and the other two were directionally consistent in 3 replication samples. Furthermore, meta-analysis pooling the discovery and replication GWAS samples yielded two additional independent loci at chromosomes 1q23 (F5, best SNP rs6028, coding-synonymous, β =0.23, p=5.97×10-9) and 15q25.3 (AGBL1, rs2469184, intronic, β =0.16, p= 4.24×10-8), with consistent associations across studies. The signals at the F5 region were not due to FV Leiden (rs6025, p=0.46 in ARIC). We also confirmed previously reported loci in KNG1, HRG, F11, F12, and ABO (O group). For PT, novel associations from two gene regions reached genome-wide significance in MICROS: F7 (top SNP rs3093253, within an exon but not translated, β =-5.44, p=8.2×10-19) and PROCR (rs6060244, near PROCR, β =4.11, p=3.5×10-9). Both loci replicated in LBC1936. Conclusions: In this large GWAS, six of the nine novel loci associated with the aPTT and PT are coagulation-related and the other three (NSD1, C6orf10, and AGBL1) are new candidate genes not directly involved in coagulation. The C6orf10 gene interacts with TNF-a at the transcription level and was previously associated with inflammatory diseases. These findings may be relevant to the prevention and treatment of coagulation disorders including VTE. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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