Division of Hematology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Perelman-University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Transl Res. 2020 Nov;225:131-140. doi: 10.1016/j.trsl.2020.04.014. Epub 2020 May 15.
There are currently no effective substitutes for high intensity therapy with unfractionated heparin (UFH) for cardiovascular procedures based on its rapid onset of action, ease of monitoring and reversibility. The continued use of UFH in these and other settings requires vigilance for its most serious nonhemorrhagic complication, heparin induced thrombocytopenia (HIT). HIT is an immune prothrombotic disorder caused by antibodies that recognize complexes between platelet factor 4 (PF4) and polyanions such as heparin (H).The pathogenicity of anti-PF4/H antibodies is likely due to the formation of immune complexes that initiate intense procoagulant responses by vascular and hematopoietic cells that lead to the generation of platelet microparticles, monocyte and endothelial cell procoagulant activity, and neutrophil extracellular traps, among other outcomes. The development of anti-PF4/H antibodies after exposure to UFH greatly exceeds the incidence of clinical disease, but the biochemical features that distinguish pathogenic from nonpathogenic antibodies have not been identified. Diagnosis relies on pretest clinical probability, screening for anti-PF4/H antibodies and documentation of their platelet activating capacity. However, both clinical algorithms and test modalities have limited predictive values making diagnosis and management challenging. Given the unacceptable rates of recurrent thromboembolism and bleeding associated with current therapies, there is an unmet need for novel rational nonanticoagulant therapeutics based on the pathogenesis of HIT. We will review recent developments in our understanding of the pathogenesis of HIT and its implications for future approaches to diagnosis and management.
目前,基于其起效迅速、易于监测和可逆转的特点,未分级肝素(UFH)仍是心血管手术中高强度治疗的有效替代药物。在这些和其他情况下继续使用 UFH,需要警惕其最严重的非出血性并发症,即肝素诱导的血小板减少症(HIT)。HIT 是一种免疫性血栓形成性疾病,由抗体引起,这些抗体可识别血小板因子 4(PF4)与肝素(H)等多阴离子之间的复合物。抗 PF4/H 抗体的致病性可能是由于形成了免疫复合物,这些复合物引发了血管和造血细胞的强烈促凝反应,导致血小板微粒、单核细胞和内皮细胞促凝活性以及中性粒细胞细胞外陷阱等的产生。接触 UFH 后,抗 PF4/H 抗体的产生大大超过了临床疾病的发生率,但尚未确定区分致病性和非致病性抗体的生化特征。诊断依赖于术前临床可能性、抗 PF4/H 抗体的筛查以及其血小板激活能力的记录。然而,临床算法和检测方式的预测值都有限,这使得诊断和管理具有挑战性。鉴于当前治疗方法与复发性血栓栓塞和出血相关的不可接受的比率,基于 HIT 发病机制,迫切需要新型合理的非抗凝治疗方法。我们将回顾最近对 HIT 发病机制的理解进展及其对未来诊断和管理方法的影响。