| Literature DB >> 33737704 |
Valériane Réau1,2, Alexandre Vallée3, Benjamin Terrier4, Aurélie Plessier5, Noémie Abisror6, Félix Ackermann2,7, Ruben Benainous8, Gérôme Bohelay9, Marie-Laure Chabi-Charvillat10, Divi Cornec11, Anne-Claire Desbois12, Stanislas Faguer13, Nathalie Freymond14, Antoine Gaillet2,7, Mohamed Hamidou15, Martin Killian16, Sylvain Le Jeune8, Anne Marchetti17, Guy Meyer18, Francisco Osorio-Perez19, Kewin Panel2,7, Pierre-Emmanuel Rautou5, Julien Rohmer2,7, Nicolas Simon20, Colas Tcherakian21, Marc Vasse22,23, Elina Zuelgaray24, Guillaume Lefevre2,25, Jean-Emmanuel Kahn2,26, Matthieu Groh27,28.
Abstract
Eosinophils have widespread procoagulant effects. Eosinophilic cardiovascular toxicity mostly consists of endomyocardial damage or eosinophilic vasculitis, while reported cases of venous thrombosis (VT) are scarce. We aimed to report on the clinical features and treatment outcomes of patients with unexplained VT and eosinophilia, and to identify predictors of relapse. This retrospective, multicenter, observational study included patients aged over 15 years with VT, concomitant blood eosinophilia ≥ 1G/L and without any other moderate-to-strong contributing factors for VT. Fifty-four patients were included. VT was the initial manifestation of eosinophil-related disease in 29 (54%) patients and included pulmonary embolism (52%), deep venous thrombosis (37%), hepatic (11%) and portal vein (9%) thromboses. The median [IQR] absolute eosinophil count at VT onset was 3.3G/L [1.6-7.4]. Underlying eosinophil-related diseases included FIP1L1-PDGFRA-associated chronic myeloid neoplasm (n = 4), Eosinophilic Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis (n = 9), lymphocytic (n = 1) and idiopathic (n = 29) variants of hypereosinophilic syndrome. After a median [IQR] follow-up of 24 [10-62] months, 7 (13%) patients had a recurrence of VT. In multivariate analysis, persistent eosinophilia was the sole variable associated with a shorter time to VT relapse (HR 7.48; CI95% [1.94-29.47]; p = 0.015). Long-term normalization of eosinophil count could prevent the recurrence of VT in a subset of patients with unexplained VT and eosinophilia ≥ 1G/L.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33737704 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-85852-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379