THE ACTIVATED PROTEIN C RESISTANCE TEST
A New Test for Patients with Thrombosis
Franklin A. Bontempo, M.D., Medical Director,
Coagulation Services
Andrea Cortese Hassett, Ph.D., Scientific Director, Coagulation Services
Description
The activated protein C (APC) resistance test is a recently described
clotting assay that is an important new diagnostic tool to define a cause of
hypercoagulability in patients with thrombosis. Defects affecting APC appear to be the
most common cause of systemic tendency for excessive clotting. This review will summarize
current information as to the incidence and significance of this abnormality.
Protein C, in the presence of its cofactor thrombomodulin and thrombin,
is enzymatically cleaved to its active form, Activated Protein C. APC is an important
natural anticoagulant which functions by inactivating the critical coagulation factors FVa
and FVIIIa.
The many causes of thrombosis include both hereditary and acquired
conditions. Inherited predispositions to thrombosis are perhaps the most disturbing
clinically, because they affect patients at a younger age. Currently, only about 5-10% of
patients with thrombosis have a definable cause of their thrombotic tendency. In the past
year, however, groups working independently in California and Europe have found that
failure of the APTT to prolong with the addition of activated protein C occurs in 30-40%
of patients with an otherwise unknown cause of thrombosis.
Further studies have shown that in 80% of these patients the cause of
the APC resistance is a mutant factor V molecule, recently designated factor V Leiden,
which is able to clot in the classic coagulation cascade but is resistant to activation by
activated protein C.
The abnormal factor V molecule has been sequenced and found to have a
single nucleotide substitution resulting in a dysfunctional molecule. The frequency of the
gene coding for this molecule has been found to be 2% in a Dutch and more recently the
English population making this abnormality more common than any previously described
hypercoagulable state.
Methods
APC resistance testing is performed on citrated plasma (blue tops) from
thrombotic patients with a normal APTT prior to anticoagulant therapy. Briefly, a standard
APTT test is performed in the absence and presence of commercially available activated
protein C supplied in the APTT activator. In the normal response, the APTT is prolonged in
the presence of APC due to the anticoagulant action of this protein. An abnormality is
detected by failure to prolong the clotting time resulting from "resistance to
APC". The results are reported as a ration of the APC-APTT/APTT with a normal result
>2.0 in most laboratories.
In patients with abnormal APC ratios, further analysis by one of
several molecular techniques may be performed on fresh samples of ACD anticoagulated
plasma (yellow tops). In our laboratory, restriction endonuclease analysis of extracted
genomic DNA is employed on some of the 20 of 127 patients already found to be positive by
APC resistance testing.
Interpretation of Results
Patients with the lowest APC ratios have been described which appear to
be homozygous for the abnormal factor V molecule while heterozygotes appear to have ratios
intermediate between the normal range and homozygote levels. Further studies are currently
underway analyzing whether some other abnormality or group of abnormalities may account
for the 20% of positive APC resistance tests not accounted for by the abnormal factor V
molecule.
Clinical Implications
The finding of an abnormal APC resistance test in a thrombotic patient
with an abnormal factor V molecule at present can only be used as an additional piece of
information in clinical management. However, knowing this abnormality is present may lower
the threshold for placing a patient with a thrombotic tendency on anticoagulants.
Currently, replacement of defective factor V is impractical due to its short half-life and
the lack of availability of a licensed factor V concentrate. Further clinical implications
await additional study.
Summary
The activated protein C (APC) resistance test may aid in defining a
cause of hypercoagulability in up to 25% of patients with thrombosis and has identified a
new congenital cause of thrombosis due to an abnormal factor V molecule. As currently
performed, the APC resistance test uses readily available techniques; more specific
testing by molecular diagnostic techniques is available. Additional studies may lead to
the identification of other causes of hypercoagulability in the near future.
Copyright © 1994, Institute For Transfusion Medicine
For further information or questions please
contact
Franklin A. Bontempo, M.D. at: (412) 209-7322
Copies of the Transfusion Medicine Update can be
obtained by contacting
Deborah Small at (412)
209-7320
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