| Literature DB >> 27346976 |
Saša Anžej Doma1, Andreas Hillarp2, Tadej Pajič1, Dušan Andoljšek1, Peter Černelč1, Irena Preldžnik Zupan1.
Abstract
Acquired inhibitors to coagulation factors other than factor VIII are extremely rare. We describe a case of a 59-year-old woman with abnormal bleeding, diagnosed with concurrent inhibitor antibodies to factor VIII and IX by Bethesda testing. We demonstrate that anti-FVIII antibodies of a very high titre are capable of disturbing the aPTT-based Bethesda assay, resulting in falsely-positive antibodies to factor IX. The case also illustrates the usefulness of the immunological assay (ELISA) in complementing the inhibitor diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: autoantibody; blood coagulation factor; enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; inhibitor
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27346976 PMCID: PMC4910271 DOI: 10.11613/BM.2016.033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Med (Zagreb) ISSN: 1330-0962 Impact factor: 2.313
Figure 1Titres of anti-FVIII and anti-FIX antibodies in our patient, measured by Bethesda assay in Ljubljana. Titres of anti-FVIII approximately 110 BU/mL and higher are accompanied by anti-FIX titres, although in a much lower titre (assuming that the cut-off for positive anti-FIX is 0.6 BU/mL). A dose-dependent effect of anti-FVIII antibodies on the anti-FIX assay is demonstrated by a linear line.
Inhibitor antibodies of our patient (Samples No.1-4) and the “Malmö patient”, measured by Bethesda-Nijmegen assay and ELISA assay in Malmö coagulation laboratory
| 152 | 2.5 | pos | neg | ND | |
| 204 | 4 | pos | neg | 4 | |
| 217 | 4 | pos | neg | ND | |
| 73 | 0 | pos | neg | ND | |
| 1429 | 14 | pos | neg | ND |
Samples No. 1-4 were taken from our patient on day 1 (Sample No.1), day 4 (Sample No.2), day 5 (Sample No.3) and day 14 (Sample No.4) of treatment. “Malmö patient”- a patient from the Malmö coagulation laboratory with a very high FVIII inhibitor titre. ND – not determined, pos – positive, neg – negative.