| Literature DB >> 28394285 |
Giancarlo Castaman1, Silvia Linari2.
Abstract
Along with haemophilia A and B, von Willebrand disease (VWD) and rare bleeding disorders (RBDs) cover all inherited bleeding disorders of coagulation. Bleeding tendency, which can range from extremely severe to mild, is the common symptom. VWD, due to a deficiency and/or abnormality of von Willebrand factor (VWF), represents the most frequent bleeding disorder, mostly inherited as an autosomal dominant trait. The diagnosis may be difficult, based on a bleeding history and different diagnostic assays, which evaluate the pleiotropic functions of VWF. Different treatment options are available for optimal management of bleeding and their prevention, and long-term outcomes are generally good. RBDs are autosomal recessive disorders caused by a deficiency of any other clotting factor, apart from factor XII, and cover roughly 5% of all bleeding disorders. The prevalence of the severe forms can range from 1 case in 500,000 up to 1 in 2-3 million, according to the defect. Diagnosis is based on bleeding history, coagulation screening tests and specific factor assays. A crucial problem in RBDs diagnosis is represented by the non-linear relationship between clinical bleeding severity and residual clotting levels; genetic diagnosis may help in understanding the phenotype. Replacement therapies are differently available for patients with RBDs, allowing the successful treatment of the vast majority of bleeding symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: bleeding; clotting factor deficiency; desmopressin; inherited disorder; on-demand; prophylaxis; replacement therapy; von Willebrand factor
Year: 2017 PMID: 28394285 PMCID: PMC5406777 DOI: 10.3390/jcm6040045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1The role of von Willebrand factor (VWF) in hemostasis. After vessel injury, subendothelium becomes exposed with collagen and VWF contained in the subendothelial matrix. The interaction of von Willebrand factor with glycoprotein Ibα (GpIbα), naturally exposed on the platelet surface, creates initial adhesion of platelets to the subendothelium and platelet activation. This makes the platelets to expose glycoprotein IIb/IIIa (αIIbβ3) which binds fibrinogen and VWF thus, increasing platelet plug. Factor VIII is bound to VWF and is naturally conveyed to the site of lesion, thus allowing also the generation of adequate amounts of fibrin (modified by courtesy of AB Federici).
Classification of von Willebrand disease, modified from Sadler et al. 2006 [15].
| Partial quantitative deficiency of VWF (~60%–70% of all cases) | |
| Virtually complete deficiency of VWF (~1%–2% of all cases) | |
| Qualitative deficiency of VWF (~25%–30% of cases) | |
| Qualitative variants with decreased platelet-dependent function associated with the absence of high and intermediate-molecular-weight VWF multimers | |
| Qualitative variants with increased affinity for platelet GpIb | |
| Qualitative variants with decreased platelet-dependent function not caused by the absence of high-molecular-weight VWF multimers | |
| Qualitative variants with markedly decreased affinity for FVIII |
Laboratory patterns in von Willebrand disease [14].
| Laboratory Assay | Pathophysiological Significance | Type 1 VWD | Type 2A VWD | Type 2B VWD | Type 2M VWD | Type 2N VWD | Type 3 VWD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| APTT | Reflects the degree of reduction of FVIII | Prolonged or normal | Prolonged or normal | Prolonged or normal | Prolonged or normal | Prolonged | Prolonged |
| Platelet count | Increased affinity for GpIb in type 2B | Normal | Normal | Low or normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| PFA-100 (CT) | Simulates primary hemostasis after injury to a small vessel | Prolonged or normal | Prolonged, no closure | Prolonged, no closure | Prolonged, no closure | Normal | Prolonged, no closure |
| FVIII:C | FVIII-VWF interaction | Low or normal | Low or normal | Low or normal | Low or normal | Proportionally low | Low (<10 IU/dL) |
| VWF:AG | Antigen concentration | Low | Low or normal | Low or normal | Normal or low | Normal or low | Very low (<5 IU/dL) |
| VWF:RCo | VWF–GPIb interaction as mediated by ristocetin in vitro | Low | Very Low (<20 IU/dL) | Variably low | Low | Normal or low | Very low (<5 IU/dL) |
| VWF:CB | VWF–collagen interaction | Low, rarely normal | Very low | Low | Low or normal | Normal or low | Very low (<5 IU/dL) |
| VWF:RCo/VWF:Ag ratio | Normal (>0.6) | Low (<0.6) | Low (<0.6) | Low or normal | Normal (>0.6) | Variable | |
| RIPA using patient’platelets | Threshold ristocetin concentration inducing patient’s platelet-rich plasma aggregation | Reduced or normal | Reduced or normal | Occurs at lower concentrations than in normal subjects | Reduced or normal | Normal | Absent |
| VWF multimer pattern | Multimeric composition of VWF | Normal pattern, VWF reduced | Large to intermediate multimers missing | Large multimers missing | Normal VWF multimer distribution (but with possible abnormal bands) | Normal | Multimers absent |
APTT, activated partial thromboplastin time; FVIII:C, factor VIII coagulant; VWF:AG, VWF antigen; VWF:RCO, VWF ristocetin cofactor; VWF:CB, VWF collagen binding; RIPA, ristocetin-induced platelet agglutination; CT, closure time; VWD, von Willebrand Disease.
VWF/FVIII concentrates licensed in Europe.
| Product | Brand | Purification | Viral Inactivation | VWF:RCo/Ag ° (Ratio) | VWF:RCo/FVIII ° (Ratio) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alphanate | Grifols | Heparin ligand chromatography | S/D + dry heat (80°, 72 h) | 0.47 ± 0.1 | 0.91 ± 0.2 |
| Fanhdi | Grifols | Heparin ligand chromatography | S/D + dry heat (80°, 72 h) | 0.47 ± 0.1 | 1.04 ± 0.1 |
| Haemate P/Humate P | CSL Behring | Multiple precipitation | Pasteurization (60°, 10 h) | 0.59 ± 0.1 | 2.45 ± 0.3 |
| Immunate | Baxter | Ion exchange chromatography | S/D + vapor heat (60°, 10 h) | 0.47 | 1.1 |
| Wilate | Octapharma | Ion exchange + size exclusion chromatography | S/D + dry heat (100°, 2 h) | - | 0.9 |
| Wilfactin | LFB | Ion exchange + affinity | S/D, 35 nm filtration, dry heat (80°, 72 h) | 0.95 | 50 |
Note: S/D: solvent/detergent; ° Data from Reference [14].
Indications for replacement therapy in VWD Reference [14].
Single or daily doses of 50 IU/kg of VWF to maintain FVIII:C levels >50 U/dL until bleeding stops (usually 7–10 days) * Single or daily doses of 20–40 IU/kg of VWF to maintain FVIII:C levels >30 U/dL until bleeding stops (usually 1–3 days) * |
Daily doses of 50–60 IU/kg of VWF to maintain pre-operative FVIII:C and VWF:RCo levels of 80–100 U/dL until 36 h postoperatively and then >50 U/dL until healing is complete (usually 7–10 days) * Measure plasma levels of FVIII:C (and VWF:RCo ) every 12 h on the day of surgery, then ever 24 h Usual thrombo-prophylactic treatment with LMWH should be implemented in patients at high risk of venous thrombosis Daily or every other day doses of 30–60 IU/kg of VWF to maintain FVIII:C levels >30 U/dL until healing is complete (usually 1–5 days) * Single dose of 20–40 IU/kg of VWF to maintain FVIII:C levels >50 U/dL for 12 h * Daily doses of 50 IU/kg of VWF to maintain FVIII:C levels >50 U/dL for 3–4 days |
Note: Dosing should be based on VWF:RCo content where this is available. * These dosages are indicated for VWD patients with FVIII:C/VWF:RCo levels <10 U/dL.
Clinical symptoms, laboratory and molecular diagnosis in Rare Bleeding Disorders (RBDs).
| Deficiency | Plasma Level (µg/mL) | Bleeding Symptoms | Laboratory Diagnosis | Prevalence | Gene (Chromosome) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fibrinogen | 1500–4000 | Umbilical cord, haemarthrosis, mucosal tract, menorrhagia, first trimester abortion, CNS Venous and arterial thromboembolism are reported | 1:1,000,000 | ||
| 100 | Umbilical cord, haemarthrosis, mucosal tract | APTT↑, PT↑, TT normal | 1:2,000,000 | F2 (11p11-q12) | |
| 10 | Mucosal tract, postoperative | APTT↑, PT↑, TT normal | 1:1,000,000 | F5 (1q24.2) | |
| 0.13–1.0 | Mucosal tract, haemarthrosis, haematomas, neonatal CNS haemorrhage | APTT normal, PT↑, TT normal | 1:500,000 | F7 (13q34) | |
| 10 | Umbilical cord, haemarthrosis, haematomas, CNS haemorrhages | APTT↑, PT↑, TT normal | 1:1,000,000 | F10 (13q34) | |
| 3–6 | Oral cavity, post-traumatic, postoperative | APTT↑, PT normal, TT normal | 1:1,000,000 | F11 (4q35.2) | |
| 10–20 | Umbilical cord, spontaneous CNS haemorrhages, miscarriages, abnormal scarring | APTT normal, PT normal, TT normal Specific FXIII assay | 1:2000000 | F13A1 (6p24-p25) | |
| As for each factor | Mucosal tract, postoperative | APTT↑, PT↑, TT normal | 1:1,000,000 | LMAN1 (18q21.3-q22) | |
| As for each factor | Umbilical cord, CNS haemorrhages, postoperative | APTT↑, PT↑↑, TT normal | <50 families | GGCX (2p12) |
Note: CNS, central nervous system; APTT, activated partial thromboplastin time; PT, prothrombin time.
Replacement therapy for RBDs.
| Deficient Factor | Plasma Half-Life | Haemostatic Level (U/mL) | Available Clotting Factor Concentrate | On-Demand Dosages | Long-Term Prophylaxis Dosages | Frequency of Prophylaxis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fibrinogen | 2–4 days | 50 (mg/dL) | pd-fibrinogen | 50–100 mg/kg | 20–30 mg/kg | Once–Twice a week |
| 3–4 days | 20–30 | pd-PCC | 20–30 IU/kg | 20–30 IU/kg | Once a week | |
| 36 h | 15–20 | No concentrate | - | Not indicated | - | |
| 3–4 h | 15–20 | pd-FVII rFVIIa | 30–40 IU/kg | 30–40 IU/kg | Thrice weekly | |
| 40–60 h | 15–20 | pd-PCC | 20–30 IU/kg | 20–40 IU/kg | Twice weekly | |
| 40–70 h | 15–20 | pd-FXI | 15–20 IU/kg | Not indicated | - | |
| 11–14 days | 2–5 | pd-FXIII | 20–40 IU/kg | 20–40 IU/kg | Every 3–4 weeks | |
| 36 h (FV) | 15–20 | Only pd-FVIII or r-FVIII | FVIII: 25–40 IU/kg | Not indicated | - | |
| As for each factor | 15–20 | pd-PCC | 20–30 IU/kg | No data | - |
Note: pd, plasma-derived; r, recombinant; PCC, prothrombin complex concentrate.