| Literature DB >> 26840092 |
Xu Zhang1, Yajing Zhao1, Xiaoqing Li2, Panpan Han1, Fangmiao Jing1, Zhangyuan Kong1, Hai Zhou1, Jihua Qiu1, Lizhen Li1, Jun Peng1,3, Ming Hou1,4.
Abstract
To evaluate whether the serum thrombopoietin levels in pregnancy-associated immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) differ from those in gestational thrombocytopenia, and reveal the possibility of thrombopoietin serving as a marker for differential diagnosis. Serum thrombopoietin concentration was determined in ITP in pregnancy (n = 35), gestational thrombocytopenia (n = 31), healthy pregnancy (n = 32), age-matched nonpregnant ITP (n = 32) and nonpregnant healthy controls (n = 35) by ELISA. The serum thrombopoietin level of ITP in pregnancy (1283 ± 646 pg/mL) was significantly higher than gestational thrombocytopenia (187 ± 64 pg/mL) (P < 0.01), although the platelet counts of these two disorders may overlap. Twenty-nine of 35 patients with ITP in pregnancy had thrombopoietin values >500 pg/mL, whereas none of the gestational thrombocytopenia patients' thrombopoietin levels exceeded 500 pg/mL. In addition, ITP in pregnancy presented a markedly higher thrombopoietin level than nonpregnant ITP (88 ± 41 pg/mL) (P < 0.01), indicating that the pathogenesis of pregnant and nonpregnant ITP was different. Our findings suggest that measurement of serum thrombopoietin concentration provides valuable diagnostic information for differentiating ITP in pregnancy from gestational thrombocytopenia. Thrombopoietin represents a reliable marker for ITP in pregnancy.Entities:
Keywords: Pathology Section; diagnosis; immune thrombocytopenia; platelet; pregnancy; thrombopoietin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26840092 PMCID: PMC4884934 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.7106
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Demographic characteristics and TPO results of patients in different groups
| - | Nonpregnant healthy control | Healthy pregnancy | GT | ITP in pregnancy | Age-matched nonpregnant ITP |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (yr), | 29, (22-39) | 27, (21-39) | 28, (18-36) | 27, (21-38) | 30, (18-45) |
| Gestational age (wk), | NA | 23, (6-41) | 36, (29-41) | 30, (8-39) | NA |
| Platelet count (×109/L) | 256, (182-297) | 232, (190-277) | 81, (53-99) | 18, (4-43) | 21, (1-58) |
| TPO level (pg/mL) | 37 ± 15 | 65 ± 22 | 187 ± 64 | 1283 ± 646 | 88 ± 41 |
| Newly diagnosed or persistent ITP, n (%) | NA | NA | NA | 29 (82.9%) | 23 (71.9%) |
| Chronic ITP, n (%) | NA | NA | NA | 6 (17.1%) | 9 (28.1%) |
| Current ITP therapy, | |||||
| Any | NA | NA | NA | 6 (17.1%) | 8 (25.0 %) |
| Corticosteroid | NA | NA | NA | 5 (14.3%) | 6 (18.8%) |
| IVIg | NA | NA | NA | 2 (5.7%) | 3 (9.4%) |
| Rituximab | NA | NA | NA | 0 (0.0%) | 1 (3.1%) |
| Other | NA | NA | NA | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (6.3%) |
| No therapy | NA | NA | NA | 29 (82.9%) | 24 (75.0%) |
| Platelet count after delivery (×109/L), n | NA | NA | 22 | 20 | NA |
| median, (range) | NA | NA | 241, | 74, | NA |
| TPO level after delivery (pg/mL), n | NA | NA | 0 | 8 | NA |
| mean ± SD | NA | NA | NA | 95 ± 32 | NA |
Figure 1Serum TPO levels in different groups
Figure 2TPO levels in gestational thrombocytopenia (GT) and ITP in pregnancy patients presented in categories
Twenty-nine of 35 ITP in pregnancy patients had TPO values > 500 pg/mL, while none of the GT patients' TPO level exceeded 500 pg/mL.
Data on ITP patients included in this study
| - | ITP in pregnancy | Nonpregnant ITP |
|---|---|---|
| Platelet count (×109/L), | 18 (4-43) | 21 (1-58) |
| TPO level (pg/mL), | 1283 ± 646 | 88 ±41 |
| Platelet autoantibodies, | ||
| Anti-GP I bIX positive, n (%) | 1 (4.0%) | 5 (15.6%) |
| Anti-GP II bIIIa positive, n (%) | 5 (20.0%) | 8 (25.0%) |
| Double positive, n (%) | 5 (20.0%) | 7 (21.9%) |
| Negative, n (%) | 14 (56.0%) | 12 (37.5%) |
| Bone marrow megakaryocytes, | ||
| Decreased, n (%) | 14, (60.9%) | 0, (0%) |
| Normal, n (%) | 5, (21.7%) | 10, (37.0%) |
| Increased, n (%) | 4, (17.4%) | 17, (63.0%) |