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Heparin‐induced thrombocytopenia: towards standardization of platelet factor 4/heparin antigen tests
Authors:A GREINACHER  T ITTERMANN  J BAGEMÜHL  K ALTHAUS  B FÜRLL  S SELLENG  N LUBENOW  S SCHELLONG  J I SHEPPARD  TE WARKENTIN
Institution:1. Institut für Immunologie und Transfusionsmedizin, Ernst‐Moritz‐Arndt Universit?t, Greifswald;2. Institut für Community Medicine, Ernst‐Moritz‐Arndt Universit?t, Greifswald;3. Klinik für Innere Medizin, Krankenhaus Dresden‐Friedrichstadt, Dresden, Germany;4. Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada
Abstract:Summary. Background: Laboratory confirmation of heparin‐induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is based on detection of heparin‐dependent platelet‐activating antibodies. Platelet factor 4 (PF4)/heparin enzyme‐immunoassays (EIA) are a widely available surrogate for platelet‐activating antibodies. Objective: Defining the optical density (OD) reactivity profiles of a PF4/heparin EIA in reference subject and patient populations and the correlation of the EIA results (expressed in OD units) with the prevalence of platelet‐activating antibodies. Patients/methods: Using quantile regression we determined the 97.5th percentile of PF4/heparin‐immunoglobulin G (IgG) EIA reactivities in non‐heparin‐treated individuals blood donors (n = 935)] and patients before heparin therapy (n = 1207). In patients with suspected HIT, we compared the correlation of EIA‐IgG reactivities (Greifswald laboratory; n = 2821) and the heparin‐induced platelet activation assay (HIPA) with the correlation of reactivities of another EIA‐IgG (McMaster laboratory; n = 1956) with the serotonin‐release assay (SRA). Results: PF4/heparin‐IgG EIA OD reactivities had a lower OD 97.5th percentile in blood donors compared with patient groups before heparin treatment (P < 0.001). The percentage of sera testing positive in the functional assays strongly correlated with PF4/heparin‐IgG EIA OD reactivities in both laboratories with very similar results (correlation coefficient > 0.9) when normalized OD ranges (maximum OD divided by 10) were used instead of absolute OD values. Conclusions: Results of PF4/heparin‐IgG EIA should not be reported as only positive or negative as there is no single acceptable cut‐off value. Instead, reporting PF4/heparin‐IgG EIA OD results in ranges allows for risk‐stratified prediction for presence of platelet‐activating antibodies. Use of normalized OD ranges permits a standardized approach for inter‐laboratory comparisons.
Keywords:heparin  heparin‐induced thrombocytopenia  laboratory testing  platelets
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