Acquired coagulation disorders

2020 ◽  
pp. 5546-5562
Author(s):  
T.E. Warkentin

Acquired disorders of coagulation may be the consequence of many underlying conditions, and although they may share abnormality of a coagulation test, for example, a prolonged prothrombin time, their clinical effects are diverse and often opposing. General clinical approach: diagnosis—most acquired disorders of coagulation can be identified by screening haemostasis tests, including (1) prothrombin time; (2) activated partial thromboplastin time; (3) thrombin clotting time; (4) fibrinogen degradation products, including (5) the cross-linked fibrin assay (D-dimer); and (6) complete blood count with examination of a blood film. Few bleeding disorders give normal results in all these tests, but disorders predisposed to thrombosis as a result of deficiency of natural anticoagulants (e.g. antithrombin, protein C, and protein S) or certain mutations (e.g. factor V Leiden) must be specifically sought. Treatment—patients with coagulopathies who are bleeding or who require surgery are usually treated with blood products such as platelets and frozen plasma. Other treatments used in particular circumstances include (1) vitamin K—required for the post-translational modification of factors II, VII, IX, and X as well as the anticoagulant factors, protein C, and protein S; (2) cryoprecipitate—used principally for the treatment of hypofibrinogenaemia; (3) concentrates of specific factors—used in isolated deficiencies (e.g. of factors VIII, IX, XI, VIIa, or fibrinogen); (4) antifibrinolytic agents (e.g. ε‎-aminocaproic acid and tranexamic acid); (5) desmopressin (1-deamino-8-d-arginine vasopressin)—increases factor VIII and von Willebrand factor.

Blood ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 102 (5) ◽  
pp. 1686-1692 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rory R. Koenen ◽  
Guido Tans ◽  
René van Oerle ◽  
Karly Hamulyák ◽  
Jan Rosing ◽  
...  

AbstractProtein S exhibits anticoagulant activity independent of activated protein C (APC). An automated factor Xa–based one-stage clotting assay was developed that enables quantification of the APC-independent activity of protein S in plasma from the ratio of clotting times (protein S ratio [pSR]) determined in the absence and presence of neutralizing antibodies against protein S. The pSR was 1.62 ± 0.16 (mean ± SD) in a healthy population (n = 60), independent of plasma levels of factors V, VIII, IX, and X; protein C; and antithrombin, and not affected by the presence of factor V Leiden. The pSR strongly correlates with the plasma level of protein S and is modulated by the plasma prothrombin concentration. In a group of 16 heterozygous protein S–deficient patients, the observed mean pSR (1.31 ± 0.09) was significantly lower than the mean pSR of the healthy population, as was the pSR of plasma from carriers of the prothrombin G20210A mutation (1.47 ± 0.21; n = 46). We propose that the decreased APC-independent anticoagulant activity of protein S in plasma with elevated prothrombin levels may contribute to the thrombotic risk associated with the prothrombin G20210A mutation.


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.    


Author(s):  
Richard C. Becker ◽  
Frederick A. Spencer

Thrombophilia is the term used to describe a tendency toward developing thrombosis. This tendency may be inherited, involving polymorphism in gene coding for platelet or clotting factor proteins, or acquired due to alterations in the constituents of blood and/or blood vessels. An inherited thrombophilia is likely if there is a history of repeated episodes of thrombosis or a family history of thromboembolism. One should also consider an inherited thrombophilia when there are no obvious predisposing factors for thrombosis or when clots occur in a patient under the age of 45. Repeated episodes of thromboembolism occurring in patients over the age of 45 raise suspicion for an occult malignancy. A summary of inherited thrombophilias are summarized in Table 24.1. This list continues to grow, as new genetic polymorphisms and combined mutations are being detected. The prevalence of common thrombophilias is shown in Figure 24.1. Factor V Leiden (FVL) mutation and hyperhomocysteinemia are present in nearly 5% of the general population and are often found in patients with venous thrombosis, while deficiencies of antithrombin (AT), protein C, and protein S are relatively uncommon. Elevated levels of factor VIII (FVIII) are uncovered frequently in the general population and in patients with thrombosis. This is not surprising as FVIII is an acute-phase reactant that increases rapidly after surgery or trauma; however, prospective studies have shown that FVIII elevation in some patients cannot be attributed to a stress reaction and probably represents mutations in the genes regulating FVIII synthesis or release (Kyrle et al., 2000). The same may be true for factors IX and XI. The relative risks for thrombosis among patients with inherited thrombophilias have been determined. While AT mutations are the least common, they are associated with a substantial risk of venous thrombosis; similar risk is seen with protein C and S deficiency. In contrast, the lifetime risk of having a thromboembolic event in an individual heterozygous for FVL is comparatively low (Martinelli et al., 1998). Incidence rates markedly increase with age, and are highest among those with AT deficiency, followed by protein C and protein S, and least with FVL.


Blood ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 92 (7) ◽  
pp. 2353-2358 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ida Martinelli ◽  
Pier Mannuccio Mannucci ◽  
Valerio De Stefano ◽  
Emanuela Taioli ◽  
Valentina Rossi ◽  
...  

AbstractDeficiency of the naturally occurring anticoagulant proteins, such as antithrombin, protein C and protein S, and activated protein C resistance due to the factor V Leiden gene mutation is associated with inherited thrombophilia. So far, no direct comparison of the thrombotic risk associated with these genetic defects is available. In this study, we wish to compare the lifetime probability of developing thrombosis, the type of thrombotic symptoms, and the role of circumstantial triggering factors in 723 first- and second-degree relatives of 150 index patients with different thrombophilic defects. We found higher risks for thrombosis for subjects with antithrombin (risk ratio 8.1, 95% confidence interval [CI], 3.4 to 19.6), protein C (7.3, 95% CI, 2.9 to 18.4) or protein S deficiency (8.5, 95% CI, 3.5 to 20.8), and factor V Leiden (2.2, 95% CI, 1.1 to 4.7) than for individuals with normal coagulation. The risk of thrombosis for subjects with factor V Leiden was lower than that for those with all three other coagulation defects (0.3, 95% CI, 0.1 to 1.6), even when arterial and superficial vein thromboses were excluded and the analysis was restricted to deep vein thrombosis (0.3, 95% CI, 0.2 to 0.5). No association between coagulation defects and arterial thrombosis was found. The most frequent venous thrombotic manifestation was deep vein thrombosis with or without pulmonary embolism (90% in antithrombin, 88% in protein C, 100% in protein S deficiency, and 57% in factor V Leiden), but a relatively mild manifestation such as superficial vein thrombosis was common in factor V Leiden (43%). There was a predisposing factor at the time of venous thromboembolism in approximately 50% of cases for each of the four defects. In conclusion, factor V Leiden is associated with a relatively small risk of thrombosis, lower than that for antithrombin, protein C, or protein S deficiency. In addition, individuals with factor V Leiden develop less severe thrombotic manifestations, such as superficial vein thrombosis.


2003 ◽  
Vol 90 (07) ◽  
pp. 17-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole Langlois ◽  
Philip Wells

SummaryClinical equipoise exists regarding whether relatives of individuals with venous thromboembolism (VTE) and thrombophilia should be screened for thrombophilia. There have been no systematic attempts to summarize studies that have assessed the incidence of VTE in relatives. The purpose of this review was to systematically identify and review observational studies with thrombophilic relatives and to summarize their findings with respect to their risk of VTE.We conducted a systematic literature review and included nine observational studies meeting a priori inclusion criteria. Potentially eligible studies evaluated VTE incidence in relatives of index patients (probands) with symptomatic thrombophilia. In the four prospective studies, the incidence of VTE for asymptomatic family members with factor V Leiden ranged from 0.58-0.67% per year, 1.0-2.5% for protein C deficiency, 0.7-2.2% for protein S deficiency, and 4% for antithrombin deficiency. About half of all VTEs occurred during well-known risk periods but incidence rates were decreased by use of prophylaxis. No deaths from pulmonary embolism or fatal hemorrhages from anticoagulants were reported. The incidence of VTE was generally lower in the retrospective studies. The pooled relative risk from four retrospective studies for factor V Leiden carriers was 3.69 (CI 2.27, 6.00) and from two studies the pooled relative risk for deficiencies of protein C, protein S, and antithrombin was 10.58 (CI 5.38, 20.81).In conclusion, the risk of VTE events in asymptomatic relatives is low, but this may be an underestimate. Anticoagulant prophylaxis during risk periods appears to be of benefit but further research in this area is required.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1815-1815
Author(s):  
Hendrika M Knol ◽  
Nic J.G.M. Veeger ◽  
Saskia Middeldorp ◽  
Karly Hamulyàk ◽  
Martin H Prins ◽  
...  

Abstract Trombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI) is a procarboxypeptidase which suppresses fibrinolysis by removing carboxy-terminal lysine residues from partially degraded fibrin. A recent study in pregnant mice suggested that fibrin degradation products induced by the subsequent generation of thrombin and fibrin, cause apoptosis of throphoblasts and consequently fetal loss. This effect was reversed by anticoagulant and antifibrinolytic drugs, and by depletion of fibrinogen. We hypothesized that increased levels of TAFI during normal pregnancy in humans may similarly protect against fetal loss. This effect might be more pronounced in women with increased thrombin generation due to thrombophilic defects. To test this hypothesis, we analysed data from four pooled family cohort studies, which originally were designed to estimate the absolute risk of venous thromboembolism, associated with either hereditary deficiencies of antithrombin, protein C or protein S, factor V Leiden, the prothrombin 20210A mutation, elevated plasma levels of factor VIII:C, or hyperhomocysteinemia. The present study addressed fetal loss in female probands and relatives. In addition to above mentioned thrombophilic defects, TAFI activity was measured. Fetal loss rates were compared in women with high TAFI levels (³ 126 U/dl) and women with normal TAFI levels. Of 1557 women, 175 were excluded because they were younger than 15 years of age, had deceased or did not consent. Another 444 women were not evaluable because they had never been pregnant or had had only terminated pregnancies, and 95 women because of missing TAFI measurements. The remaining 843 women (including probands) were analysed, of whom 95 women had high TAFI levels and 748 women had normal TAFI levels. Age at time of first pregnancy was comparable in both groups, as was the distribution of thrombophilic defects. Results are summarized in the table. 18 women (18.9 %) with high TAFI levels experienced any, i.e. early or late fetal loss, compared to 205 women (27.5 %) with normal TAFI levels (p= 0.074). Overall 17 women (17.9 %) with high TAFI levels experienced one or recurrent early fetal loss compared to 180 women (24.2 %) with normal TAFI levels (p= 0.173). 1 woman (1.1 %) with high TAFI level had experienced recurrent early fetal loss, compared to 53 women (7.1 %) with normal TAFI levels (p=0.023). The number of fetal losses per woman ranged from 2 to 8 in women with normal TAFI levels (median was 2 fetal losses), while it was 2 in the woman with high TAFI level. In conclusion, women with high TAFI levels had less recurrent fetal loss in comparison with women with normal TAFI levels. Our results support the assumption that high TAFI levels protects against recurrent fetal loss. Normal TAFI levels High TAFI levels p-value Age at 1st pregnancy, median (range), yr 24.8 (11-42) 24.1 (17-40 ) TAFI levels, U/dL, mean (SD) 99.7 (13.6) 137.1 (10.6) Women, n (n=748) (n=95) Total fetal loss, n (%) 206 (27.5) 18 (18.9) 0.074 early 180 (24.2) 17 (17.9) 0.173 late 29 (3.9) 2 (2.1) 0.383 Total recurrent fetal loss, n (%) 56 (7.5) 2 (2.1) 0.050 early 53 (7.1) 1 (1.1) 0.023 late 2 (0.3) 0 (0) 0.613


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.


2007 ◽  
Vol 18 (6) ◽  
pp. 543-546 ◽  
Author(s):  
Armando Tripodi ◽  
Daniela Asti ◽  
Veena Chantarangkul ◽  
Eugenia Biguzzi ◽  
Pier Mannuccio Mannucci

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