INTRODUCTION: The clinical relevance of decreased coagulation factor XII (FXII) plasma activity as a risk factor for both venous and arterial thrombosis is still discussed controversially. The current study evaluated the predictive value of FXII levels for all-cause mortality in a large Viennese patient cohort. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Individuals, whose FXII activity levels were determined for suspected coagulation disorders or thrombophilia screening between 1991-2003 were included in this study (n = 8936, 51% male, 49% female, median age 43 years). Death/survival was determined by record linkage with the Austrian Death Registry. The median observation period was 5 years covering a total of 46 400 person years; the death rate was 17.1%. For Cox regression analysis, FXII plasma activity was divided into 11 categories of 10% steps with the category of > 100% FXII serving as a reference category. RESULTS: With decreasing FXII plasma activity, hazard ratios for all-cause mortality gradually increased linearly from 1.0 in the > 100% category to 1.5 (95% CI: 1.2-1.9) in the 80-90% category to 4.7 (95% CI: 3.4-6.5) in the 10-20% category. Similar results were obtained, when only vascular mortality or death as a result of ischemic heart disease was considered. No significant increase in all-cause mortality (HR: 1.4, 95%CI 0.7-2.8) was observed in the small group of FXII-deficient subjects [0-10% category (n = 58)]. CONCLUSIONS: This study first demonstrates a strong and almost linear association of FXII plasma activity between 90% and 10% with all-cause mortality in a large Viennese patient cohort. Interestingly, mortality rates are not increased when FXII activity is below 10%, resulting in a U-shaped survival curve.
INTRODUCTION: The clinical relevance of decreased coagulation factor XII (FXII) plasma activity as a risk factor for both venous and arterial thrombosis is still discussed controversially. The current study evaluated the predictive value of FXII levels for all-cause mortality in a large Viennese patient cohort. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Individuals, whose FXII activity levels were determined for suspected coagulation disorders or thrombophilia screening between 1991-2003 were included in this study (n = 8936, 51% male, 49% female, median age 43 years). Death/survival was determined by record linkage with the Austrian Death Registry. The median observation period was 5 years covering a total of 46 400 person years; the death rate was 17.1%. For Cox regression analysis, FXII plasma activity was divided into 11 categories of 10% steps with the category of > 100% FXII serving as a reference category. RESULTS: With decreasing FXII plasma activity, hazard ratios for all-cause mortality gradually increased linearly from 1.0 in the > 100% category to 1.5 (95% CI: 1.2-1.9) in the 80-90% category to 4.7 (95% CI: 3.4-6.5) in the 10-20% category. Similar results were obtained, when only vascular mortality or death as a result of ischemic heart disease was considered. No significant increase in all-cause mortality (HR: 1.4, 95%CI 0.7-2.8) was observed in the small group of FXII-deficient subjects [0-10% category (n = 58)]. CONCLUSIONS: This study first demonstrates a strong and almost linear association of FXII plasma activity between 90% and 10% with all-cause mortality in a large Viennese patient cohort. Interestingly, mortality rates are not increased when FXII activity is below 10%, resulting in a U-shaped survival curve.
Authors: C Puy; E I Tucker; Z C Wong; D Gailani; S A Smith; S H Choi; J H Morrissey; A Gruber; O J T McCarty Journal: J Thromb Haemost Date: 2013-07 Impact factor: 5.824
Authors: Anton Matafonov; Philberta Y Leung; Adam E Gailani; Stephanie L Grach; Cristina Puy; Qiufang Cheng; Mao-Fu Sun; Owen J T McCarty; Erik I Tucker; Hiroaki Kataoka; Thomas Renné; James H Morrissey; Andras Gruber; David Gailani Journal: Blood Date: 2014-01-09 Impact factor: 22.113
Authors: Maria Sabater-Lleal; Miguel Chillón; Carolina Mordillo; Angel Martínez; Estel Gil; José Mateo; John Blangero; Laura Almasy; Jordi Fontcuberta; José Manuel Soria Journal: Thromb Res Date: 2009-09-27 Impact factor: 3.944
Authors: Volker Pönitz; José W Govers-Riemslag; Hugo Ten Cate; Rene van Oerle; Trygve Brügger-Andersen; Heidi Grundt; Patrycja Næsgaard; David Pritchard; Alf I Larsen; Dennis W Nilsen Journal: Thromb J Date: 2010-04-15