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Thrombophilia. Barry White National Haemophilia Director Director, National Centre for Hereditary Coagulation Disorders, St James’s Hospital. Virchow’s Triad. Disorder of blood vessel wall Disordered blood flow (stasis) Abnormality of blood constituents.
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Thrombophilia Barry White National Haemophilia Director Director, National Centre for Hereditary Coagulation Disorders, St James’s Hospital
Virchow’s Triad • Disorder of blood vessel wall • Disordered blood flow (stasis) • Abnormality of blood constituents
Venous thrombosis - a multifactorial disease • Acquired risk factors pregnancy, surgery, hormonal therapy, malignancy • Inherited risk factors single gene defects e.g. antithrombin multigenic defects e.g. antithrombin + FV leiden
Thrombophilia • Inherited or acquired predisposition to venous thrombosis • Laboratory abnormalities
Increased procoagulants • FVIII • FIX • FXI • Prothrombin 20210A • Fibrinogen • Thrombin activator fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI)
Decreased anticoagulants • Antithrombin deficiency • Protein C deficiency • Protein S deficiency • Activated PC resistance (FV Leiden)
Unknown mechanism • Antiphospholipid syndrome • Hyperhomocysteinemia
Activated protein C resistance • Activated protein C resistance • Factor V leiden (R506Q) in 90% of cases • Coagulation based assay (+/-FV def plasma) • PCR based assay • 2%-15% • 2.0 –2.3% of Irish population are heterozygous FVL Livingstone et al 2000 • 20% of unselected VTE • Relative risk 3-8 fold for heterozygotes
APC Factor V (normal) APC Factor V Leiden
Prothrombin G20210A • Poort 1996 • Mutation in 3’ UTR associated with increased prothrombin levels • 1.3% of Irish population heterozygous (Keenan et al 2000) • 6-8% of unselected VTE • 16% of familial VTE
Hyperhomocysteinemia • Definite risk factor for arterial vascular disease • >18.5 mol/l in 5% of normal population • >18.5 mol/l in 10% of VTE • Homozygous MTHFR (C677T) - 10% Irish population • Acquired B12, folate, B6 deficiency
Antiphospholipid syndrome • Venous, arterial or small vessel except superficial venous thrombosis • 3 consecutive unexplained fetal loss • Severe pre-eclampsia or placental insufficiency leading to prematurity (<34w) • Unexplained single fetal loss >10 wks with normal morphology
APLS - laboratory diagnosis • ACL IgG or IgM (> 3SD above normal) • Lupus anticoagulant • Need 2 positive tests (either test will do) at least 6 weeks apart • Anti B2-Glycoprotein I
Hormonal therapy • OCP risk of VTE increased x 2-3 fold (baseline risk 1:10,000) • FVL risk of VTE increased x 3-7 fold • OCP + FVL risk of VTE increased x 33 fold (30:10,000 = 0.3%) • Need to screen 2 million to save one life • Similar synergistic interaction with other thrombophilic defects • HRT likely to be similar
Pregnancy and Virchow’s triad • Venous stasis - changes in tone and obstruction • Vascular damage at time of delivery • APTT, PS (free and total), APCr • FVIII:C, VWF, Fibrinogen • PAI-1 and PAI-2
Pregnancy and venous thromboembolic disease • Pregnancy increases risk x 5-10 fold • 0.86/1000 deliveries • 0.71/1000 (DVT) : 0.15/1000 (PE) • Left leg >80% • Ileofemoral more common than calf vein (72% versus 9%) • Increased with age, caesarian section, bed rest and prior history of DVT/PE
Clinical practice – DVT/PE • Diagnosis DVT – doppler ultrasound primarily (venogram gold standard) PE – ventilation perfusions scan primarily (pulmonary angiogram is gold standard) • Treatment Heparin x 5-10 days until at least 5 days of warfarin Warfarin x 6 months ( indefinite for second thrombosis)