4.4 Article

Similar hypercoagulable state and thrombosis risk in type I and type III protein S-deficient individuals from families with mixed type I/III protein S deficiency

期刊

HAEMATOLOGICA-THE HEMATOLOGY JOURNAL
卷 95, 期 9, 页码 1563-1571

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FERRATA STORTI FOUNDATION
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2010.021923

关键词

protein S; Kaplan-Meier analysis; activated protein C; tissue factor pathway inhibitor; thrombin generation

资金

  1. Dutch Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) [917-76-312, 917-36-372]

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Background Protein S, which circulates in plasma in both free and bound forms, is an anticoagulant protein that stimulates activated protein C and tissue factor pathway inhibitor. Hereditary type I protein S deficiency (low total and low free protein S) is a well-established risk factor for venous thrombosis, whereas the thrombosis risk associated with type III deficiency (normal total and low free protein S) has been questioned. Design and Methods Kaplan-Meier analysis was performed on 242 individuals from 30 families with protein S deficiency. Subjects were classified as normal, or having type I or type III deficiency according to their total and free protein S levels. Genetic and functional studies were performed in 23 families (132 individuals). Results Thrombosis-free survival was not different between type I and type III protein S-deficient individuals. Type III deficient individuals were older and had higher protein S, tissue factor pathway inhibitor and prothrombin levels than type I deficient individuals. Thrombin generation assays sensitive to the activated protein C- and tissue factor pathway inhibitor-cofactor activities of protein S revealed similar hypercoagulable states in type I and type III protein S-deficient plasma. Twelve PROS1 mutations and two large deletions were identified in the genetically characterized families. Conclusions Not only type I, but also type III protein S deficiency is associated with a hypercoagulable state and increased risk of thrombosis. These findings may, however, be restricted to type III deficient individuals from families with mixed type I/III protein S deficiency, as these represented 80% of type III deficient individuals in our cohort.

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