Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC), Albinusdreef 2, 2333 ZA, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Division of Thrombosis and Hemostasis, Department of Internal Medicine, Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC), Leiden, The Netherlands.
J Cardiothorac Surg. 2022 May 7;17(1):108. doi: 10.1186/s13019-022-01862-2.
Extracorporeal circulation (ECC) in cardiac surgery is performed under systemic heparinization. Adequacy of heparin therapy and anticoagulation during ECC is assessed by activated clotting time (ACT), although there are concerns regarding the reliability of this measure. The ACT can be affected by factors other than heparin anticoagulation. A novel factor that should be considered is the influence of a COVID-19 infection. More than half of the hospitalized COVID-19 patients develop coagulation abnormalities with dysregulated coagulation test results. Patients recently recovered from COVID-19 may still demonstrate some forms of coagulation disorder affecting the ACT. This case describes an inaccurate point-of-care ACT testing in a patient with previous COVID-19 infection undergoing cardiac surgery with ECC and the alternative coagulation testing performed.
A 77-years-old Caucasian male presented with symptomatic severe mitral valve regurgitation for which he underwent surgery. Medical history revealed a COVID-19 infection one month before surgery. Pre-operative hematological lab results were normal and baseline ACT during surgery was 100 s. To achieve an adequate ACT of > 400 s, multiple doses of heparin were needed and after administration of a triple dose (75,000 IE heparin in total) this adequate ACT was achieved. In the meanwhile we measured anti-Xa level and APTT, which were at adequate levels when ACT was still < 400 s.
This case emphasizes the need of alternative methods for monitoring heparin therapy in case ACT does not respond adequately. Another point to highlight in this case is the poorly correlated relation between ACT and APTT and anti-Xa in light of the recent COVID-19 infection. Although studies have shown that COVID-19 infection can cause coagulopathy and altered hemostatic parameters, ACT has never been investigated in COVID-19 patient. Understanding the correlation between ACT, APTT and anti-Xa in COVID-19 patients is mandatory.
心脏手术中的体外循环 (ECC) 是在全身肝素化下进行的。ECC 期间肝素治疗和抗凝效果通过激活凝血时间 (ACT) 来评估,尽管 ACT 的可靠性存在一些问题。ACT 可能会受到除肝素抗凝以外的因素影响。一个应该被考虑的新因素是 COVID-19 感染的影响。超过一半的住院 COVID-19 患者会出现凝血异常,凝血测试结果异常。最近从 COVID-19 中康复的患者可能仍会表现出影响 ACT 的某种形式的凝血障碍。本病例描述了一位既往 COVID-19 感染的患者在接受 ECC 心脏手术时出现不准确的即时 ACT 检测结果,以及随后进行的替代凝血检测。
一位 77 岁的白人男性因有症状的严重二尖瓣反流而就诊,接受了手术。病史显示,他在手术前一个月感染了 COVID-19。术前血液学实验室检查结果正常,手术期间基础 ACT 为 100 秒。为了达到理想的 ACT 值>400 秒,需要多次给予肝素,给予三倍剂量(总剂量为 75,000 单位肝素)后,ACT 值达到理想水平。同时,我们测量了抗-Xa 水平和 APTT,ACT 值仍<400 秒时,这些指标处于理想水平。
本病例强调了在 ACT 反应不充分的情况下,需要替代方法来监测肝素治疗。另一个需要在本病例中强调的是,考虑到最近的 COVID-19 感染,ACT 与 APTT 和抗-Xa 之间的相关性较差。尽管研究表明 COVID-19 感染可导致凝血障碍和凝血参数改变,但 ACT 从未在 COVID-19 患者中进行过研究。了解 COVID-19 患者中 ACT、APTT 和抗-Xa 之间的相关性是必要的。