Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine, Michael G DeGroote School of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
Hematology Am Soc Hematol Educ Program. 2011;2011:143-9. doi: 10.1182/asheducation-2011.1.143.
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is a prothrombotic drug reaction caused by platelet-activating IgG antibodies that recognize platelet factor 4 (PF4)/polyanion complexes. Platelet activation assays, such as the serotonin-release assay, are superior to PF4-dependent immunoassays in discerning which heparin-induced antibodies are clinically relevant. When HIT is strongly suspected, standard practice includes substituting heparin with an alternative anticoagulant; the 2 US-approved agents are the direct thrombin inhibitors (DTIs) lepirudin and argatroban, which are "niche" agents used only to manage HIT. However, only ~ 10% of patients who undergo serological investigation for HIT actually have this diagnosis. Indeed, depending on the clinical setting, only 10%-50% of patients with positive PF4-dependent immunoassays have platelet-activating antibodies. Therefore, overdiagnosis of HIT can be minimized by insisting that a positive platelet activation assay be required for definitive diagnosis of HIT. For these reasons, a management strategy that considers the real possibility of non-HIT thrombocytopenia is warranted. One approach that I suggest is to administer an indirect, antithrombin (AT)-dependent factor Xa inhibitor (danaparoid or fondaparinux) based upon the following rationale: (1) effectiveness in treating and preventing HIT-associated thrombosis; (2) effectiveness in treating and preventing thrombosis in diverse non-HIT situations; (3) both prophylactic- and therapeutic-dose protocols exist, permitting dosing appropriate for the clinical situation; (4) body weight-adjusted dosing protocols and availability of specific anti-factor Xa monitoring reduce risk of under- or overdosing (as can occur with partial thromboplastin time [PTT]-adjusted DTI therapy); (5) their long half-lives reduce risk of rebound hypercoagulability; (6) easy coumarin overlap; and (7) relatively low cost.
肝素诱导的血小板减少症(HIT)是一种由血小板激活 IgG 抗体引起的促血栓形成药物反应,这些抗体能识别血小板因子 4(PF4)/多阴离子复合物。血小板激活检测,如 5-羟色胺释放检测,在辨别哪些肝素诱导的抗体具有临床相关性方面优于依赖 PF4 的免疫检测。当强烈怀疑 HIT 时,标准做法包括用替代抗凝剂替代肝素;美国批准的两种药物是直接凝血酶抑制剂(DTI)依诺肝素和阿加曲班,它们是“利基”药物,仅用于治疗 HIT。然而,只有约 10%的接受 HIT 血清学检查的患者实际上被诊断为该疾病。事实上,根据临床情况,只有 10%-50%的依赖 PF4 的免疫检测呈阳性的患者具有血小板激活抗体。因此,通过坚持要求进行阳性血小板激活检测来明确诊断 HIT,可以最大程度地减少 HIT 的过度诊断。基于以下原因,考虑非 HIT 血小板减少症的真实可能性的管理策略是合理的。我建议的一种方法是根据以下原理使用间接的、抗凝血酶(AT)依赖性因子 Xa 抑制剂(达那肝素或磺达肝癸钠):(1)在治疗和预防 HIT 相关血栓形成方面有效;(2)在治疗和预防多种非 HIT 情况下的血栓形成方面有效;(3)既有预防剂量方案又有治疗剂量方案,可根据临床情况进行适当的剂量调整;(4)体重调整剂量方案和特定的抗因子 Xa 监测的可用性可降低剂量不足或过量的风险(这可能发生在用部分凝血活酶时间 [PTT] 调整的 DTI 治疗中);(5)它们的长半衰期降低了反弹高凝的风险;(6)容易与香豆素重叠;(7)成本相对较低。