| Literature DB >> 34283272 |
Claire A Murphy1,2, Elaine Neary3,4, Daniel P O'Reilly5, Sarah Cullivan6, Afif El-Khuffash7,5, Fionnuala NíAinle6,8,9,10, Patricia B Maguire10, Naomi McCallion7,5, Barry Kevane6,9,10.
Abstract
Premature infants are at high risk of haemorrhage and thrombosis. Our understanding of the differences between the neonatal and adult haemostatic system is evolving. There are several limitations to the standard coagulation tests used in clinical practice, and there is currently a lack of evidence to support many of the transfusion practices in neonatal medicine. The evaluation of haemostasis is particularly challenging in neonates due to their limited blood volume. The calibrated automated thrombogram (CAT) is a global coagulation assay, first described in 2002, which evaluates both pro- and anti-coagulant pathways in platelet-rich or platelet-poor plasma. In this review, the current applications and limitations of CAT in the neonatal population are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Bleeding; Haemostasis; Neonates; Platelets; Thrombin; Thrombosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34283272 PMCID: PMC8760221 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-021-04196-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.183
Fig. 1The standard process for performing CAT in plasma (in duplicate) (Image created with BioRender.com)
Fig. 2A standard thrombin generation curve. The lag time, time to peak thrombin, endogenous thrombin potential and peak thrombin are displayed. (Image created with BioRender.com)
Summary of the included studies which have used CAT in neonates
| Author | Year | Plasma | Neonatal blood source | Neonatal population | Control | Number of participants | Main neonatal CAT findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fritsch et al. [ | 2006 | PPP | UCB | Term infants | Adults | Term infant = 28 Neonate with FVIII deficiency = 1 Adult = not described | Neonates had a shortened lag time and TTP, but reduced ETP and peak thrombin compared with adult PPP FVIII deficiency (in vitro) caused a slight prolongation in lag time and TTP but no reduction in peak thrombin. Increasing TFPI levels caused a prolongation in lag time and time to peak while increasing AT caused a reduction in peak height and ETP |
| Cvirn et al. [ | 2007 | PPP | UCB | Term infants | Adults | Term infant = 16 Adult = 17 | Neonates had a shortened lag time and TTP, but reduced ETP and peak thrombin compared with adult PPP Melagatran exhibited distinctly different patterns of sensitivity in adult and neonatal PPP |
| Schweintzger et al. [ | 2011 | PPP | UCB | Term infants | Adults | Term infant = 31 Adult = 28 | Neonates had a shortened lag time and TTP but reduced ETP and peak thrombin compared with adult PPP TF-EVs had a greater haemostatic effect in neonates |
| Franklin et al. [ | 2016 | PPP | Peripheral (Arterial line) | Term infants undergoing CPB | Adults | Term infant = 15 Adult = 20 | Neonates had a shortened lag time but reduced peak thrombin compared with adult PPP In neonates after reversal of CPB, lag time remains prolonged, but peak thrombin is increased Lower doses of both 4f-PCCs tested were sufficient to increase peak thrombin in neonates. Only 4f-PCC containing FVIIa reduced lag time to pre-CPB levels |
| Schlagenhauf et al. [ | 2017 | PPP | UCB | Term infants | Adults | Term infant = 17 Adult = 12 | Neonates had a shortened lag time and TTP, but this study found no difference in ETP or peak thrombin compared with adult PPP Polyphosphate had a reduced relative impact on thrombin generation parameters in neonates, but lower concentrations of polyphosphate were required to exert maximal effect |
| Haidl et al. [ | 2019 | PPP | UCB | Term infants | Adults | Term infant = 30 Adult = 20 | Neonates had a shortened lag time and TTP, but reduced ETP and peak thrombin compared with adult PPP |
| Haidl et al. [ | 2019 | PRP | UCB | Term infants | Adults | Term infant = 10 Adult = 10 | Neonates had a shortened lag time and TTP, a reduced ETP but higher peak thrombin compared with adult PRP TG in neonates in not dependent on platelet count NovoSeven® altered clot dynamics but not ETP, was not dependent on platelet count and the dose response was similar in neonates and adults |
| Tripodi et al. [ | 2008 | PPP | UCB and peripheral | Preterm infants (30–37 weeks) | Term infants | Preterm UCB = 55 Preterm peripheral = 19 Term UCB = 109 Term peripheral = 37 | ETP was significantly higher in preterm infants |
| Neary et al. [ | 2015 | PPP | UCB | Preterm infants (24–30 weeks) | Term infants | Preterm infant = 15 Term infant = 13 | Lag time and TTP were significantly shorter in the preterm group |
| Tripodi et al. [ | 2020 | PPP | Peripheral | Preterm infants (< 1500 g) | Term infants | Preterm infant = 87 Term infant = 64 | A procoagulant imbalance in preterm infants compared with term infants |
| Bernhard et al. [ | 2009 | PRP* | UCB | Term infants | Adults | Term infant = 12 Adult = 12 | Neonatal and adult platelets supported thrombin generation comparably |
| Peterson et al. [ | 2018 | PRP | Peripheral (arterial line) | Term infants undergoing CPB | Term infants = 44 | Post-op CAT correlated better with TFCK ratios than immediately post CPB reversal Peak thrombin inversely correlated with high TFCK ratios (blood samples with the highest heparin activity) | |
| Guzzetta et al. [ | 2013 | PPP | Peripheral | Term infants undergoing CPB | Term infant = 11 | After reversal of CPB, lag time remains prolonged but peak thrombin is increased Ex vivo addition of NovoSeven® reduced the lag time only. 3f-PCC reduced lag time and significantly increased peak thrombin and velocity index | |
| Ghirardello et al. [ | 2020 | PPP | Peripheral | Preterm infants with IFALD | Preterm infants without IFALD | IFALD = 32 No IFALD = 60 | Preterm infants with IFALD had similar ETP to infants without IFALD |
3f-PCC three factor prothrombin complex concentrate, 4f-PCC four factor prothrombin complex concentrate, AT antithrombin, CAT calibrated automated thrombography, CPB cardiopulmonary bypass, ETP endogenous thrombin potential, EV extracellular vesicle, IFALD intestinal failure associated liver disease, PPP platelet poor plasma, PRP platelet-rich plasma, TF tissue factor, TFCK thrombin-initiated Fibrin Clot Kinetics TFPI tissue factor pathway inhibitor, TG thrombin generation, TTP time to peak thrombin, UCB umbilical cord blood
Fig. 3The neonatal applications of CAT. CAT has been used to evaluate the differences in secondary haemostasis in preterm and term infants compared with adults and the relative haemostatic effect of platelets and extracellular vesicles in neonates. The use of CAT as a mechanism to test haemostatic therapies in a pre-clinical model and in infants at high risk of haemorrhage, particularly those undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass are also described. (Image created with BioRender.com)
A comparison of CAT with viscoelastic assays (TEG/ROTEM) in neonates [13, 15, 71]
| Thrombin generation assays (CAT) | Viscoelastic assays (TEG/ROTEM) | |
|---|---|---|
| Principle of assay | Assesses ability to generate thrombin (the key effector protease of the coagulation cascade) in platelet-rich or platelet-poor plasma Generation of fibrin clot occurs rapidly (and prior to exhaustion of the thrombin-generating capacity of plasma), and therefore, parameters of thrombin generation as opposed to clot formation may be more informative and more reflective of the overall complexity of the haemostatic balance The assay may be modified to examine specific components of haemostasis in isolation (e.g. APC sensitivity).While some modifications of this assay have been described, in general, CAT has not been widely used for assessing whole blood coagulation or fibrinolysis | Assesses fibrin clot formation and fibrinolysis in whole blood This will take into account the influence of plasma, platelets, leucocytes and red cells. As fibrinolysis is also assessed in parallel, this assay may have more immediate clinical applications in certain scenarios, such as in the management of major haemorrhage Individual components of blood coagulation cannot be assessed |
| Volumes required | The required volume will be dependent on the clinical/research scenario Only the plasma fraction of whole blood is utilised; thus, larger volumes of whole blood are typically required to yield the required plasma sample volume | Generally, a smaller volume is required as the entire whole blood sample is used |
| Timing of analysis, sample types, availability of results | Fresh or thawed batches of frozen plasma may be used Analysis can take up to 1 h to complete | Immediate analysis of whole blood samples only—not suitable for stored samples Assay completed and results available within minutes |
| Location of testing | Laboratory-based | Bedside point of care assay |
| Availability of neonatal reference ranges | No | Yes |
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