| Literature DB >> 25808486 |
George Palatianos1, Alkiviadis Michalis2, Petros Alivizatos3, Stavroula Lacoumenda4, Stefanos Geroulanos5, Andreas Karabinis5, Eugenia Iliopoulou6, Giannoula Soufla6, Chryso Kanthou7, Mazen Khoury2, Petros Sfyrakis3, George Stavridis3, George Astras1, Maria Vassili4, Christina Antzaka4, Katerina Marathias5, Ioannis Kriaras5, Androniki Tasouli5, Kyrillos Papadopoulos5, Marina Katafygioti6, Nikoletta Matoula6, Antonios Angelidis6, Euthemia Melissari6.
Abstract
Thrombocytopenia and thromboembolism(s) may develop in heparin immune-mediated thrombocytopenia (HIT) patients after reexposure to heparin. At the Onassis Cardiac Surgery Center, 530 out of 17,000 patients requiring heart surgery over an 11-year period underwent preoperative HIT assessment by ELISA and a three-point heparin-induced platelet aggregation assay (HIPAG). The screening identified 110 patients with HIT-reactive antibodies, out of which 46 were also thrombocytopenic (true HIT). Cardiac surgery was performed in HIT-positive patients under heparin anticoagulation and iloprost infusion. A control group of 118 HIT-negative patients received heparin but no iloprost during surgery. For the first 20 patients, the dose of iloprost diminishing the HIPAG test to ≤5% was determined prior to surgery by in vitro titration using the patients' own plasma and donor platelets. In parallel, the iloprost "target dose" was also established for each patient intraoperatively, but before heparin administration. Iloprost was infused initially at 3 ng/kg/mL and further adjusted intraoperatively, until ex vivo aggregation reached ≤5%. As a close correlation was observed between the "target dose" identified before surgery and that established intraoperatively, the remaining 90 patients were administered iloprost starting at the presurgery identified "target dose." This process significantly reduced the number of intraoperative HIPAG reassessments needed to determine the iloprost target dose, and reduced surgical time, while maintaining similar primary clinical outcomes to controls. Therefore, infusion of iloprost throughout surgery, under continuous titration, allows cardiac surgery to be undertaken safely using heparin, while avoiding life-threatening iloprost-induced hypotension in patients diagnosed with HIT-reactive antibodies or true HIT.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25808486 DOI: 10.1002/ajh.24017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hematol ISSN: 0361-8609 Impact factor: 10.047