Title: Overview of Rare Coagulation Deficiencies
1Overview of Rare Coagulation Deficiencies
- Factor VIIFactor XIGlanzmann Thrombasthenia
Nathalie AubinThe Montreal Childrens
HospitalMcGill University Health Centre
2Factor VII
- Trace protein in blood produced in the liver and
vitamin K dependant - TF combined with activated Factor VII triggers
the coagulation cascade resulting in the
generation of thrombin and fibrin clot
3Adapted by MW King. The Medical Biochemistry
pagehttp//www.indstate.edu/theme/mwking/bloodcoa
gulation.html
4Inheritance Pattern Incidence
- Autosomal recessive disorder
- Equally frequent in male and female
- Disorder more prevalent in countries where
consanguineous marriage occurs - 1/300,000 and 1/500,000
- Bleeding problems observed in homozygous
individuals and rarely in heterozygous individuals
5Diagnosis
- Often referred for increased bruising, recurrent
epistaxis, increased bleeding after a dental
extraction - Family history
- Incidental finding following a pre-op workup (?
PT) - Blood work Prothrombin time (PT) is prolonged
(? PT, ?INR), Factor VII assay aPTT normal
6Symptoms
- Differs from classical hemophilia
- Residual level of Factor VII is a predictor of
bleeding symptoms patients with Factor VII level
of 1-2 are sometimes asymptomatic - Very variable spectrum of bleeding problems
7Symptoms (Severe Factor VII Deficiency)
- Intracranial hemorrhage
- Up to 16 of patients will experience a CNS
bleed. Often present shortly after birth - Hemarthrosis
- Varies considerably amongst patients
- Easy bruising and soft tissue hematomas
- Muscle bleed
- Rare event
- Mucosal bleeding
- Most common manifestation epistaxis,
menorrhagia, dental, melena, hematuria
8Management
- Half-life of Factor VII is between 2½ hours and
5-6 hours - To achieve normal hemostasis 15-30 level of
Factor VII is enough even when the patient
undergoes surgery
9Management
- 1. Fresh - Frozen PlasmaContent of Factor VII
in normal plasma is 1 unit/ml Volume overload can
be a problem - 2. Factor VII Concentrates1 unit/kg will
increase the Factor VII in the blood by
1.7Prophylaxis dosing 10-50 unit/kg 1-3
times/week - 3. Recombinant Factor VIIaDosing 20mcg/kg
- 4. Prothrombin Complex
10Case Presentation
- Parents are first cousins from Pakistan
- 3rd child of the family
- Shortly after birth a circumcision was performed
oozing - Fresh frozen plasma was given
- Blood work PT 100 sec. Factor VII
- Both parents were heterozygous with levels of 40
11Case Presentation
- Patient was started on prophylaxis with Factor
VII concentrates 50 units/kg because of the risk
of spontaneous CNS hemorrhage - No bleeding complications since the start of
prophylaxis
12Factor XI Deficiency
- Also known as Hemophilia C
- Trace protein found in the blood and is synthesis
in the liver - Plays an important role in the amplification of
the initial coagulation response the
coagulation process is maintained and amplified
through the activation of FXI by Thrombin
13Intrinsic Pathway(PTT)
Extrinsic Pathway(PT)
Adapted by MW King. The Medical Biochemistry
pagehttp//www.indstate.edu/theme/mwking/blood-co
agulation.html
14Inheritance Pattern Incidence
- Autosomal recessive disorder
- Will affect both male and female equally
- Very uncommon in the general population but
recognized in all ethnic groups - Ashkenazi Jews most prevalent genetic defects
in this population (8-9)
15 Diagnosis
- Often referred for epistaxis, easy bruising and
bleeding after circumcision - Incidental finding in pre-op assessment
- Family history
- Blood work activated partial thromboplastin
(aPTT) is prolonged. Factor XI level - PT normal
16Classification
- Normal levels of Factor XI activity range from
70-150 - 1. Severe deficiency (level
- Homozygous individuals
- 2. Partial deficiency (level 20-70)
- Heterozygous individuals
- coinheritance of Factor XI deficiency along
with Von Willebrand disease as also been observed
in patients with bleeding symptoms.
17Symptoms
- The bleeding risk is variable within an
individual - There is a poor correlation between the degree of
plasma FXI deficiency and the bleeding tendency - Most patients do not suffer from spontaneous
bleeding, but are at risk of bleeding following
trauma or surgery
18Symptoms
- Most common symptoms
- Mucosal bleeding
- Menorrhagia and postpartum hemorrhage
- Bruising
- Bleeding with surgical intervention
19Management
- Patients do not need prophylaxis for routine
daily activity, but do need treatment following
dental extraction, major surgery or trauma - The half-life of Factor XI is estimated to be
between 50-80 hours - Hemostasis is achieved through level of 30 of
normal activity
20Management
- 1. Fresh-frozen plasma
- Effective in raising FXI level but requires the
use of large amount (risk of fluid overload) - 2. FXI concentrates
- High purity concentrates
- Effective and easy to administer rapidly
- Risk of thrombosis associated with this product
21Management
- 3. DDAVP( Desmopressin)
- Used for heterozygous patients but the efficacy
of DDAVP remains unclear - 4. Antifibrinolytic agents
- Helps preventing bleeding in tissues with high
fibrinolytic activity - Used with women experiencing menorrhagia
-
22Case Presentation
- 41 year old man
- Mild Factor XI deficiency
- Diagnosed following a hemorrhage after a
tonsillectomy as a child - Extensive bleeding history Hemarthrosis
following a knee injury, bleeding complications
following 2 spinal surgeries, etc
23Case Presentation
- Cervical spine surgery planned in 2005
- Blood work
- Factor XI 29
- von Willebrand profile
- FVIIIc 51
- vW ant 45
- vW risto 73
- Blood group O
24Case Presentation
- Management for the surgery
- Patient admitted 48 hours prior to surgery for
infusion of fresh frozen plasma to obtain
hemostatic level of Factor XI the morning of the
surgery - DDAVP 20mcg IV 2 hours prior to surgery to
increase the vW protein
25Glanzmann Thrombasthenia
- Discovered in Switzerland by a pediatrician named
Glanzmann in 1918. Children affected with the
disease all came from a tiny village named Le
Valais. There were frequent marriages between
close relatives in this village. - Defect in the platelet glycoprotein IIb/IIIa
which is a receptor on the surface of the
platelet that allows platelets to interact with
the blood vessel wall or with other blood cells - Affects the ability of the blood platelets to
aggregate (platelet clumping)
26Platelet Adhesion Aggregation
Source Disorders of the platelet function, from
the Canadian Hemophilia Society website
27Inheritance Pattern Incidence
- Autosomal recessive disorder
- Affects male and female equally
- Incidence 1/ 1,000,000
28Diagnosis
- Often referred for soft tissue hematomas,
epistaxis, mouth bleeding, menorrhagia - Family history
- Blood work
- Bleeding time will be prolonged
- Platelet aggregation studies failure of
platelets to aggregate or reduced aggregation
29Classification
- Three types of severity depending on the
importance of the platelet deficiency in
GlycoproteinIIb/IIIa - Type 1 (Severe) level
- Type 2 (Less severe) level between 5-20 of
normal - Type 3 (Least severe) a variant of
Thrombasthenia. Level is normal but with
abnormalities in the way platelets aggregate
30Symptoms
- Purpura
- Mucosal bleeding nose, mouth
- Gastro-intestinal, CNS hemorrhage (rare)
- Menorrhagia, postpartum hemorrhage
31Management
- PlateletsEffective treatment but its use is
often limited by the appearance of antibodies
that destroy the transfused platelets - 2. Recombinant Factor VIIaUseful in patient
who no longer respond to platelet transfusions or
to avoid the development of platelet antibodies - 3. Antifibrinolytic agent
- 4. Hormonal therapy for womenMay control
menorrhagia
32Case Presentation
- 36 year old man from Pakistan
- Parents were first cousins
- Older brother died at 10 days old from
circumcision hemorrhage - Major bleeding problem through his life
epistaxis - In past year
- bleeding hemorrhoids
- Admitted 2X for decreased hemoglobin
33Case Presentation
- Blood work
- Platelet aggregation 0
- Bleeding time 30 minutes
- Hemorrhoidectomy performed and treated with
- Platelets transfusion
- Antifibrinolytic therapy
34Recommendations
- Physical activity to stay fit
- Appropriate gear for sporting activities
- Dental prevention
- No ASA, Ibuprofen
- Avoidance of herbal remedies
- Vaccination
- Identification (bracelet, wallet card)
- Comprehensive care team
35Booklets
- Booklets available
- Fibrinogene
- Factor V
- Factor VII
- Factor X
- Factor XII
- Factor XIII
- Glanzman Disease
- In Progress
- Factor XI
- Bernard Soulier Syndrome