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HEMOPHILIA Curs an IV - limba engleza 2012-2013 Coagulation factor disorders • Inherited bleeding disorders – Hemophilia A and B – vonWillebrands disease – Other factor deficiencies • Acquired bleeding disorders – Liver disease – Vitamin K deficiency/warfarin overdose – DIC Factor Deficiencies (CONGENITAL) HEMOPHILIAS Caused by lack of coagulation factors VON WILLEBRAND’S DISEASE Caused by lack of von willebrand´s factor History • First references are mentioned in Jewish texts in second century AD by Rabbi Ben Gamaliel who correctly deduced that sons of mother- that he did not know at that time- was an hemophilic carrier bled to death after circumcision. Hence he made a ruling that excepted newborn Jewish boys of this ritual if two previous brothers had had bleeding problems with it. • Then Rabbi and physician Maimonides in the XII century noted that the mothers were the carriers, hence the second ruling that if she married twice the newborns from the second marriage were also excepted. • In 1800 John Otto a physician in Philadelphia wrote a description of the disease where he clearly appreciated the cardinal features: an inherited tendency of males to bleed • In 1928 the word Hemophilia was defined. Types of Hemophilia • Hemophilia A Absence or deficiency of Factor VIII • Hemophilia B (Christmas Disease) Absence or deficiency of Factor IX • Hemophilia C Absence or deficiency of Factor XI Very rare and mild Background • Inherited deficiency of factor VIII (hemophilia A) or factor IX (hemophilia B) • Sex-linked inheritance; almost all patients male – Female carriers may have mild symptoms • Most bleeding into joints, muscles; mucosal and CNS bleeding uncommon • Severity inversely proportional to factor level < 1%: severe, bleeding after minimal injury 1-5%: moderate, bleeding after mild injury > 5%: mild, bleeding after significant trauma or surgery Etiology - Genetics of Hemophilia • Hemophilia is due to mutation of the gene situated on X chromosome • About half of cases of hemophilia A due to an inversion mutation in intron 1 or 22 • Remainder genetically heterogeneous – Nonsense/stop mutations prevent factor production – Missense mutations may affect factor activity rather than production • 15-20% of cases due to new mutations Etiology - Hemophilia Inheritance • Hemophilia is an X-linked gene disease. o A father with the X-linked gene will pass it to all his daughters resulting in heterozygous carriers. o A mother who is a carrier of the mutant gene will pass the gene on to half her sons and half her daughters. All her sons will have hemophilia and all her daughters will be heterozygous carriers. Females are carriers Males have the disease Etiology - Genetics • Transmitted by females, suffered by males • The female carrier transmits the disorder to half their sons and the carrier state to half her dtrs • The affected male does not transmit the disease to his sons (Y is nl) but all his dtrs are all carriers (transmission of defected X) Etiology - Genetics • Hemophilia in females If a carrier female mates with an affected male there’s the possibility that half their daughters are homozygous for the disease Other possibility: Turner syndrome (45,X0) with a defective X Epidemiology Hemophilia A & B • It is the second most common inherited clotting factor abnormality (after von Willebrand disease) • 1 in 5000-10000 live male births • No difference between racial groups • Hemophilia A is 90-80% of all Hemophiliacs • Hemophilia B is10-15% of all Hemophiliacs • Factor VIII …1:10,000 males • Both X-linked recessive • Rare females…, inherited from both parents. • One-third - spontaneous genetic mutation. Clinic - Hemophilia A & B Clinical manifestations are indistinguishable • Hemarthrosis (most common) Fixed joints • Soft tissue hematomas (e.g., muscle) Muscle atrophy Shortened tendons • Other sites of bleeding Urinary tract CNS, neck (may be life-threatening) • Prolonged bleeding after surgery or dental extractions Clinical manifestations • Frequency and severity of bleeding are related to F VIII levels Severity F VIII activity Clinical manifestations Severe <1% Spontaneous hemorrhage from early infancy Freq sp hemarthrosis Moderate 2-5% Hemorrhage sec to trauma or surgery Occ sp hemarthrosis Mild >5% Hemorrhage sec to trauma or surgery Rare sp bleeding Coinheritance of prothrombotic mutations (i.e. Factor V Leiden) can decrease the risk of bleeding Clinical Manifestations: Hemarthrosis • The most common, painful and most physically, economically and psychologically debilitating manifestation. • Clinically: Aura: tingling warm sensation Excruciating pain Generally affects one joint at the time Most commonly: knee; but there are others as elbows, wrists and ankles. Edema, erythema, warmth and LOM If treated early it can subside in 6 to 8 hs and disappear in 12 to 24 hs. Complications: Chronic involvement with joint deformity complicated by muscle atrophy and soft tissue contractures Clinical Manifestations: Hemarthrosis • Pathophysiology: Bleeding probably starts from synovial vessels into the synovial space. Reabsorption of this blood is often incomplete leading to chronic proliferative synovitis, where the synovium is more thickened and vascular, creating a “target joint” with recurrence of bleeding. There is destruction of surrounding structures as well-bone necrosis and cyst formations, osteophytes Terminal stage: Chronic Hemophiliac arthropathy: fibrous or bony ankilosing of the joint. Hemophilia – Hemarthrosis Hemophilia – Hemarthrosis Hemophilia – Hemarthrosis Hemophilia – Hemarthrosis Clinical Manifestations Hematomas • Subcutaneous and muscular hematomas spread within fascial spaces, dissecting deeper structures • Subcutaneous bleeding spreads in characteristic mannerin the site of origin the tissue is indurated purplish black and when it extends the origin starts to fade • May compress vital structures: such as the airway if it is bleeding into the tongue throat or neck; it can compromise arteries causing gangrene and ischemic contractures are common sequelae, especially of calves and forearms Clinical Manifestations Hematomas • Muscle hematomas: 1. calf, 2. thigh, 3. buttocks, 4. forearms • Psoas hematoma- if right sided may mimic acute appendicitis • Retroperitoneal hematoma: can dissect through the diaphragm into the chest compromising the airway. It can also compromise the renal function if it compresses the ureter 21 Clinical Manifestations Hematomas Clinical Manifestations Hematomas Clinical Manifestations Hematomas Clinical Manifestations Hematomas Clinical Manifestations Hematomas Clinical Manifestations Hematomas •Leading cause of death of hemophiliacs •Spontaneous or following trauma •May be subdural, epidural or intracerebral •Suspect always in hemophilic patient that presents with unusual headache •If suspected- FIRST TREAT, then pursue diagnostic workup •LP only when fVIII has been replaced to more than 50% Laboratory diagnosis • Nomenclature: – FVIII protein that is lacking or aberrant – FVIIIc functional FVIII measured by clotting assays – FVIIIag Antigenic protein that can be detected with immunoassays • Deficit can be quantitative or qualitative • General Lab: prolonged aPTT, nl PT and BT • Mixing studies: aPTT corrects with normal plasma –if there are no factor VIII antibodies present • Clotting assays: F VIII activity, expressed in % of normal DecreasedQUANTITATIVE • Immunoassays: “Cross Reactive Material” Positive- there is an antigen similar to the F VIII protein- QUALITATIVE Differential diagnosis - Clinical Features of Bleeding Disorders Platelet disorders Coagulation factor disorders Site of bleeding Skin Mucous membranes (epistaxis, gum, vaginal, GI tract) Deep in soft tissues (joints, muscles) Petechiae Yes No Ecchymoses (“bruises”) deep Small, superficial Large (hematomas), Hemarthrosis / muscle bleeding Extremely rare Common Bleeding after cuts & scratches Yes No Bleeding after surgery or trauma Immediate, usually mild Delayed (1-2 days), often severe Differential diagnosis - Clinical Features of Bleeding Disorders Remember the basic differences between bleeding associated with coagulation factor deficiencies and bleeding associated with platelet problems. Deep bleeding such as in joints and hematomas generally arise as the result of a coagulation deficiency. Superficial bleeding such as petechiae, bruises, epistaxis, and hematuria generally reflect a quantitative or qualitative deficiency of platelets. Hemophilia Treatment of bleeding episodes • Unexplained pain in a hemophilia should be considered due to bleeding unless proven otherwise • External signs of bleeding may be absent • Treatment: factor replacement, pain control, rest or immobilize joint • Test for inhibitor if unexpectedly low response to factor replacement Treatment Factor replacement • Choice of treatment: is based on Purity of the factor (how concentrated or “purified” the factor is) Safety Cost Nowadays most used therapies are believed to be effective and relatively safe Treatment of hemophilia A • Intermediate purity plasma products – Virucidally treated – May contain von Willebrand factor • High purity (monoclonal) plasma products – Virucidally treated – No functional von Willebrand factor • Recombinant factor VIII – Virus free/No apparent risk – No functional von Willebrand factor Treatment Factor replacement • Replacement of F VIII is the cardinal step to prevent or reverse acute bleeding episodes Dosing: Replacement products can be given on the basis of body weight or plasma volume ( aprox 5% of body weight) 1 U/ml = 100% factor activity Practically 1 unit of F VIII/kg increases F VIII about 0.02 U/ml In a severe hemophiliac, to raise F VIII to 100% activity or 1 U/ml, we need 50 U/kg Redosing is based on half life: 8-12 hs Monitoring of Factor activity is crucial during therapy Dosing clotting factor concentrate • 1 U/kg of factor VIII should increase plasma level by about 2% (vs 1% for factor IX) • Half-life of factor VIII 8-12 hours, factor IX 18-24 hours • Volume of distribution of factor IX about twice as high as for factor VIII • Steady state dosing about the same for both factors – initial dose of factor IX should be higher FACTOR VIII CONCENTRATE • Recombinant – Virus-free, most expensive replacement – Treatment of choice for younger/newly diagnosed hemophiliacs – Somewhat lower plasma recovery than with plasma-derived concentrate • Highly purified – Solvent/detergent treated, no reports of HIV or hepatitis transmission • Intermediate purity (Humate-P™) – Contains both factor VIII and von Willebrand factor – Solvent/detergent treated, no reports of HIV or hepatitis transmission – Mainly used to treat von Willebrand disease DDAVP • Releases vWF/fVIII from endothelial cells • Factor VIII levels typically rise 2-4 fold after 30-60 min (IV form) or 60-90 min (intranasal) • Enhanced platelet adhesion due to ↑ vWF • Useful for mild hemophilia (VIII activity > 5%) prior to dental work, minor surgery etc • Trial dose needed to ensure adequate response • Cardiovascular complications possible in older patients Dosing guidelines for hemophilia A • Mild bleeding – Target: 30% dosing q8-12h; 1-2 days (15U/kg) – Hemarthrosis, oropharyngeal or dental, epistaxis, hematuria • Major bleeding – Target: 80-100% q8-12h; 7-14 days (50U/kg) – CNS trauma, hemorrhage, lumbar puncture – Surgery – Retroperitoneal hemorrhage – GI bleeding • Adjunctive therapy – alfa amino caproic acid (Amicar) or DDAVP (for mild disease only) Factor replacement in severe hemophilia A Site of bleed Desired factor level Dose Other Joint 40-50% 20-40 U/kg/day Rest, immobilization, PT Muscle 40-50% 20-40 U/kg/day Risk of compartment syndrome or neuro compromise Oral mucosa 50% initially 25 U/kg x 1 Follow w ith antifibrinolytic therapy Epistaxis GI GU CNS Trauma or surgery Initially 80-100%, then 30% 40-50 U/kg then 30-40 until healed U/kg daily Pressure, packing, cautery Initially 100%, then 30% until healed Initially100%, then 30% until healed Initially100%, then 50% until healed 40-50 U/kg then 30-40 U/kg daily 40-50 U/kg then 30-40 U/kg daily 50 U/kg then 25 U/kg q 12h infusion Endoscopy to find lesion Initially100%, then 50% until healed 50 U/kg then 25 U/kg q Test for inhibitor before 12h infusion surgery! R/O stones, UTI •Give factor q 12 hours for 2-3 days after major surgery, continue with daily infusions for 7-10 days •Trough factor levels with q 12 h dosing after major surgery should be at least 50-75% •Most joint and muscle bleeds can be treated with “minor” (50%) doses for 1-3 days without monitoring Complications of therapy • Formation of inhibitors (antibodies) – 10-15% of severe hemophilia A patients – 1-2% of severe hemophilia B patients • Viral infections – Hepatitis B – Hepatitis C – HIV Human parvovirus Hepatitis A Other Complications of therapy Development of Antibodies • Specific inhibitor antibodies that neutralize FVIII activity • Most frequently in severe affected patients- affecting 25% • Predisposing factors: severe disease, type of genetic mutation (inversion, nonsense mutation, deletions), family history of inhibitors development • Seen aprox 9-11 days post factor VIII exposure Complications of therapy Development of Antibodies • Diagnosis: mixing study does not correct aPTT. Bethesda assay: which consists of serial dilutions of plasma is pooled with normal plasma and incubated for 2 hs, then the activity level is measured by coagulation assays. The higher inhibitor titer, the greater the dilution required to demonstrate residual FVIII activity. It is expressed on Bethesda Units: High responders: >5 Bethesda units, low responders <5. 5/23/2017 42 Course and prognosis Development of Antibodies Treatment: of active bleeding and inhibitor ablation via immune tolerance induction. • High purity FVIII: treatment of life threatening hemorrhages in pts that are low responders • Porcine FVIII: high responders with high inhibitors levels that have life threatening hemorrhages • Prothrombin complex concentrates and activated prothrombin complex concentrates: bypassing agents for thrombosis (prothrombin, fVII, fIX, f X and Prot S and C). Carries high risk of thrombosis and it is difficult to monitor. • rFVIIa: Effective response in 90% of patients. Gets activated by tissue factor, so thrombosis response is more modulated than that of APCCs, however there are no studies comparing them both Treatment of hemophilia B • Agent – High purity factor IX – Recombinant human factor IX – Highly purified (solvent/detergent treated, no reports of virus transmission) – Prothrombin complex concentrate • Mixture of IX, X, II, VII • Low risk of virus transmission • Some risk of thrombosis • Dose – Initial dose: 100U/kg – Subsequent: 50 U/kg every 24 hours Treatment - Prophylaxis • Prophylactic treatment should be considered in all patients with severe hemophilia • In 1997 was recommended by the Medical and Scientific Advisory Council of the National Hemophilia Foundation. • Candidate should be reliable to manage a central venous catheter device • Administration is three times a week to make a severe hemophiliac a moderate phenotype • There is significant improvement in the clinical condition and quality of life. Carrier detection and Antenatal diagnosis Family history: if we follow the inheritance pattern a female is a carrier if she: Has an hemophilic father Has two hemophilic sons Has one hemophilic son and has a family history Has a son but no family history, there is a 67% chance that she is. Carrier detection and Antenatal diagnosis Coagulation based assays: Generally heterozygous females have <50% f VIII levels but if normal it can’t be excluded vWF is usually normal or elevated in female carriers, so F VIII:FvW ratio is low which adds sensitivity to these tests DNA based assays: Southern blot can detect the inversion in intron 22 If negative for that, there is the need for DNA sequencing For prenatal diagnosis: DNA testing on choronic villi samples obtained by biopsy at week 12