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Inherited Thrombophilia in the Era of Direct Oral Anticoagulants

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23031821

Keywords

inherited thrombophilia; direct oral anticoagulant; antithrombin; protein C; protein S; DOAC neutralization

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Diagnosis of severe inherited thrombophilia is crucial for selecting appropriate anticoagulant therapy, but DOACs may interfere with thrombophilia diagnostic methods, potentially leading to missed diagnoses. Therefore, it is necessary to consider the use of devices to remove DOACs to minimize the risk of false-negative results.
Severe inherited thrombophilia includes rare deficiencies of natural anticoagulants (antithrombin and proteins C and S) and homozygous or combined factor V Leiden and FII G20210A variants. They are associated with a high thrombosis risk and can impact the duration of anticoagulation therapy for patients with a venous thromboembolism (VTE) event. Therefore, it is important to diagnose thrombophilia and to use adapted anticoagulant therapy. The widespread use of direct anticoagulants (DOACs) for VTE has raised new issues concerning inherited thrombophilia. Concerning inherited thrombophilia diagnosis, DOACs are directed toward either FIIa or FXa and can therefore interfere with coagulation assays. This paper reports DOAC interference in several thrombophilia tests, including the assessment of antithrombin, protein S, and protein C activities. Antithrombin activity and clot-based assays used for proteins C and S can be overestimated, with a risk of missing a deficiency. The use of a device to remove DOACs should be considered to minimize the risk of false-negative results. The place of DOACs in the treatment of VTE in thrombophilia patients is also discussed. Available data are encouraging, but given the variability in thrombosis risk within natural anticoagulant deficiencies, evidence in patients with well-characterized thrombophilia would be useful.

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