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Heparin Induced Thrombocytopenia

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Heparin Induced Thrombocytopenia Jennifer Howard D.O. June 4, 2002 Case 68 yo WF with hx of HTN and DM presents to ER after a fall. She is found to have a hip ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Heparin Induced Thrombocytopenia


1
Heparin Induced Thrombocytopenia
  • Jennifer Howard D.O.
  • June 4, 2002

2
Case
  • 68 yo WF with hx of HTN and DM presents to ER
    after a fall. She is found to have a hip fracture
    and the plan is to go to surgery after medical
    clearance. Prophylactic SQ unfractionated heparin
    is started and continued for 3d while pt is
    cleared for surgery.

3
Case
  • After surgery the heparin is restarted and 2 days
    later the patient is moved to rehab. After
    transfer the patient complains of redness and
    swelling of arm near site of subclavian TLC.
    Labs reveal mild leukocytosis and Platelets of
    85,000. Doppler US shows an acute DVT of the arm.

4
Case
  • Med list Insulin SS, Demerol, HCTZ, Captopril,
    Heparin SQ, and Tylenol
  • Questions
  • Why does she have thrombocytopenia?
  • Why does she have a DVT?
  • Is this HIT?
  • How do we treat her now?

5
Introduction
  • Thrombocytopenia is a well-recognized
    complication of heparin treatment
  • Two types of heparin induced thrombocytopenia

6
Type 1 HIT
  • Less serious
  • Less severe decrease in platelet count
  • Occurs 1-2 days after heparin initiation
  • Usually returns to baseline with continued
    heparin administration
  • No clinical consequence
  • Non-immune, due to a direct effect of heparin on
    platelet activation

7
Type 2 HIT
  • More serious
  • Immune-mediated disorder with formation of
    antibodies against heparin-PF4 complex
  • Aka heparin associated thrombocytopenia and white
    clot syndrome
  • white clot is a platelet rich arterial
    thrombosis

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HIT- Pathophysiology
  • Antigen of HIT
  • Tetrameric glycoprotein found in platelet alpha
    granules
  • Platelet Factor 4 (PF4)
  • PF4 is positively charged and binds negatively
    charged sulfated polysaccharide chains of heparin
  • A conformational change occurs producing an
    immunoglobulin response to the altered PF4 in
    some pts

10
HIT- Pathophysiology
  • PF4, heparin, and IgG antibodies form
    multimolecular complexes and bind to the platelet
    surface
  • Platelet activation occurs
  • Releases more PF4
  • Leads to thrombin generation and procoagulant
    effect

11
HIT- Pathophysiology
  • HIT antibodies also react with the heparin-PF4
    complex on endothelial cells and monocytes
  • Leads to tissue factor expression
  • Procoagulant response

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HIT- Pathophysiology
  • Activated platelets aggregate and are removed
    prematurely from the circulation, causing
    thrombocytopenia
  • HIT is uniquely assoc with platelet activation
  • May explain assoc with thrombosis rather than
    bleeding

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16
HIT- Pathophysiology
  • LMWH is smaller in size than UFH but can still
    complex with PF4
  • HIT may recur or persist if LMWH is used to treat
    HIT triggered by UFH

17
HIT-Incidence and Frequency
  • Frequency of HIT varies from 1-5 of pts
    receiving UFH
  • Highest frequency 3-5 reported in post op
    orthopedic pts who received prophylactic UFH for
    10-14days
  • lt1 in medical pts- prophylactic or therapeutic
    doses

18
HIT-Incidence and Frequency
  • Highest frequency of HIT Ab in cardiac surgical
    pts but lower risk of HIT
  • Risk of LMWH-induced HIT very low in medical pts
    but up to .5 in ortho pts receiving LMWH for
    10-14d

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HIT-Incidence and Frequency
  • 10-20 of pts receiving UFH have 50 drop in
    platelets or drop to below normal range
  • In one study of 665 hip surgery pts receiving
    heparin prophylaxis
  • UFH- 7.8 had anti-heparin Ab, 2.7 developed HIT
  • LMWH- 2.2 had anti-heparin Ab, 0 developed HIT

21
HIT-Incidence and Frequency
  • Most pts who develop HIT have received IV or SQ
    heparin
  • Cases reported from hepflush or use of
    heparin-coated catheter

22
Thrombocytopenia
  • Normal platelet counts in adults 150,000-450,000
  • Mean values 237,000 in men 266,000 in
    women
  • Definition platelet count lt150,000 per
    microliter
  • 2.5 of the normal population have platelets lt
    150,000

23
Thrombocytopenia
  • Surgical bleeding due solely to thrombocytopenia
    does not occur until plts lt 50,000
  • Clinical or spontaneous bleeding does not occur
    until plts lt10,000-20,000

24
Thrombocytopenia- Clinical Presentation
  • Most cases of thrombocytopenia are asymptomatic
  • Most common symptomatic presentation is bleeding
  • Mucosal- epistaxis, gingival bleeding
  • Cutaneous- petechiae, superficial ecchymoses

25
Thrombocytopenia- Clinical Presentation
  • Bleeding with platelet abnormalities occurs
    immediately after vascular trauma
  • Rarely have delayed bleeding in contrast to
    coagulation disorders
  • CNS bleeding is uncommon but it is the most
    common cause of death due to thrombocytopenia

26
Thrombocytopenia
  • Platelets are produced in the bone marrow from
    megakaryocytes
  • The megakaryocyte produces plts by cytoplasmic
    shedding directly into marrow sinusoids
  • Normal platelet production is 35,000-50,000 per
    mcL per day- can be increased 8x if increased
    demand

27
Thrombocytopenia
  • Once in circulation, plts survive 8-10 days
  • Plts are removed from circulation by the
    monocyte-macrophage system
  • One third of the platelet mass is in the spleen
    is equilibrium with the circulating pool

28
Thrombocytopenia- Mechanisms
  • 4 mechanisms explain reduced platelets
  • 1- decreased production
  • 2- increased destruction
  • 3- spurious
  • 4- dilutional or distributional

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Thrombocytopenia- Decreased Production
  • Decreased production by bone marrow occurs when
    the marrow is suppressed or damaged
  • After viral infection
  • After chemotherapy or radiation
  • Congenital or acquired BM aplasia/ hypoplasia
  • Direct alcohol toxicity
  • Vitamin B12/ folate deficiency

31
Thrombocytopenia- Increased Destruction
  • Seen in may conditions
  • Certain viral infections like mono and CMV
  • Physical destruction during CP bypass
  • ITP
  • DIC
  • HELLP
  • Drugs
  • TTP-HUS

32
Thrombocytopenia- Dilutional/Distributional
  • After massive blood loss and transfusions with
    PRBCs
  • Splenic sequestration can increase from Nl 30 to
    90
  • Seen in extreme splenomegally
  • Platelet mass and survival remain normal

33
Thrombocytopenia- Spurious
  • If anticoagulation of the blood sample is
    inadequate platelets clump and are counted as
    leukocytes
  • .1 of normal people have EDTA-dependent
    agglutinins which lead to clumping and spurious
    leukocytosis

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Thrombocytopenia- Initial Approach
  • If the platelet count does not make sense, repeat
    it
  • History- recent viral infection, alcoholism,
    pregnancy, etc
  • Bleeding history- past bleeding problems, iron
    def anemia, bleeding after dental work, menses,
    etc
  • Drug ingestion- heparin, valproic acid, gold
    salts, bactrim, quinine, etc

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Thrombocytopenia- Physical Exam
  • Check ocular fundus for bleeding
  • Lymphadenopathy
  • Hepatosplenomegaly
  • Stool for occult blood
  • Skin- petechiae in dependent areas

39
Thrombocytopenia- CBC Peripheral Smear
  • Need to do this fairly quickly since TTP and
    acute leukemia need quick treatment
  • Pseudothrombocytopenia can be confirmed by
    presence of clumps on smear

40
Thrombocytopenia- Peripheral Smear
  • Abnormal platelet morphology
  • Small number of congenital disorders that can be
    diagnosed by abnormal morphology
  • May- Hegglin anomaly
  • Bernard-Soulier Syndrome
  • Alport Syndrome
  • Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome

41
Thrombocytopenia- Decreased Production
  • Circulating blasts-gt acute leukemia
  • Leukoerythroblastic picture-gt BM invasion by
    tumor, fibrosis, granulomata
  • Other cytopenias-gt myelodysplasia
  • Normal size or small platelet-gt absence of
    effective BM response to the increased need

42
Thrombocytopenia- Increased Destruction
  • Microangiopathic picture with fragmented RBCc,
    hemolytic anemia-gt DIC, TTP-HUS
  • Large platelets-gt young platelets that are
    hemostatically active without bleeding
  • Associated autoimmune disease (SLE)

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Thrombocytopenia-BM Biopsy
  • Indicated in virtually all pts with unexplained
    thrombocytopenia
  • May exclude healthy people under 60
  • Normal or increased megakaryocytes-gt increased
    peripheral destruction
  • Absent or decreased megakaryocytes with
    hypocellularity-gt decreased production

45
Thrombocytopenia- BM Biopsy
  • Hypercellular marrow- myelodysplasia or
    B12/folate def
  • Granulomata, fibrosis or malignant cells-gt marrow
    invasion

46
Thrombocytopenia
  • Incidental Thrombocytopenia of Pregnancy
  • ITP-gt exclude all other causes

47
HIT- Clinical Manifestations
  • HIT is a clinicopathologic syndrome
  • Clinical criterion thrombocytopenia
  • Pathologic criterion HIT antibodies

48
Clinical Manifestations- Thrombocytopenia
  • Thrombocytopenia is usually mild-mod
  • Often complicated by thrombosis
  • Platelet count begins to fall 5-10 days after
    receiving heparin
  • Median platelet count falls to 60,000/mcL
  • 60 moderate 30,000-100,000
  • 20 severe lt30,000
  • 20 mild gt100,000
  • Typical drug-induced thrombocytopenia lt20,000

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Clinical Manifestations- Thrombosis
  • In gt50 thrombosis occurs
  • new, recurrent or progressive
  • Especially pts with severe thrombocytopenia
  • Thrombosis can be venous or arterial
  • Highest occurrence DVT 50, PE 25
  • Other reactions skin, transient global amnesia,
    acute systemic reaction

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Thrombosis
  • Mechanism not known but several theories
  • Release of procoagulants from activated platelets
  • Generation of platelet microparticles
  • Increased tissue factor generation from
    endothelial cell injury
  • Fragments of platelet membrane serve as catalyst
    for clotting

54
Thrombosis
  • Since flow and shear are high in arterial
    circulation, thrombosis is rich in platelets
  • Clots appear white due to platelet aggregates

55
Onset of HIT
  • 70- typical presentation is fall n platelets
    beginning 5-10d after starting heparin
  • 30- rapid fall in platelets following
    reinstitution of heparin therapy leads to HIT
    diagnosis retrospectively
  • Most often occurs in post-op pts whose platelet
    counts should be rising

56
Rapid Onset HIT
  • Seen in 30 of pts with persistent anti-heparin
    Ab
  • Associated with prior heparin therapy in last 100
    days
  • Anti-heparin antibodies are transient
  • If rapid onset of thrombocytopenia and no recent
    heparin, look for another cause

57
Delayed Onset HIT
  • Typically affects pts with high titers of
    platelet-activating IgG Ab
  • HIT occurs on average 9 days after withdrawing
    heparin
  • May actually be delayed-recognition

58
Delayed Onset HIT
  • Study published in Annals Int Med 2/2002
  • 14 pts re-admitted with TEC after benign hospital
    course heparin therapy
  • 12 had venous thrombosis, 4 arterial thrombosis
  • Plts mildly decreased on admission
  • 11 received heparin on readmission with decrease
    in plts to mean 39,000
  • All 14 had anti-heparin Ab

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Delayed Onset HIT
  • Study published in Annals Int Med 10/2001
  • 12 pts with thrombosis avg 9 days after
    withdrawing heparin
  • 9 pts received heparin on readmission with
    further decrease in platelet count
  • One patient suffered cardiac arrest after heparin
    dose

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HIT- Diagnosis
  • Since thrombocytopenia is so common in
    hospitalized pts, specific lab tests need to be
    ordered
  • Always check serial platelets to determine when
    platelets fall in relation to starting heparin
    therapy

63
HIT- Diagnosis
  • First, must recognize the syndrome
  • Otherwise unexplained thrombocytopenia
  • Thrombosis assoc with thrombocytopenia
  • Platelet count drop 50 from prior value
  • Heparin initiation must have been within 5-10days
  • First make diagnosis clinically as labs may have
    slow turnaround time

64
HIT- Diagnosis
  • Two major groups of assays exist
  • Activation or functional assays- detect Ab by
    their characteristic heparin-dependent platelet
    activating properties
  • Antigen assays- detect reactivity against PF4 by
    immunoassay

65
Activation/ Functional Assays
  • C14-Serotonin Release Assay- gold standard
  • Platelet aggregation test
  • Heparin induced platelet aggregation assay
  • Measurement of microparticle release by flow
    cytometry
  • use plts from healthy donors with patient serum
    and heparin to measure plt activation

66
Antigen Assays
  • Immunoassays for measurement of Ab
  • ELISA with PF4-heparin complexes
  • ELISA with PF4-polyvinylsulphate complexes
  • New assay for rapid detection of HIT Ab
  • Agglutination assay with PF4-heparin complexes
  • Adapted to the gel technique of the
    ID-microtyping system

67
ID-Microtyping System
  • British Journal of Haematology 2002
  • 100 pts with HIT by HIPA PF4-heparin ELISA
  • 20 suspected HIT with neg tests
  • 20 healthy people
  • Purpose- to compare new ID-Heparin PF4 to other
    assays

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ID-Microtyping System- Results
  • ELISA had highest sensitivity but lowest
    specificity
  • ID-HPF4 did fairly well
  • Authors suggest using it with a functional test
    for now and doing a prospective study

71
HIT- Treatment
  • First- immediate cessation f all exposure to
    heparin
  • Includes hepflush
  • Avoid LMWH since it may cross-react with the
    anti-heparin Ab
  • Heparin cessation alone usually not enough since
    these pts remain at risk for thrombosis
  • One study of 62 pts showed 53 risk of thrombosis
    at 30 days

72
HIT- Treatment
  • Two recommended alternatives to treat thrombosis
    or pts requiring anticoagulation
  • Danaparoid
  • Direct thrombin inhibitor
  • These should also be used for prophylaxis in HIT
  • Avoid warfarin until platelet count gt100,000 due
    to risk of venous limb gangrene

73
HIT Treatment- Danaparoid
  • Brand Orgaran
  • Heparinoid composed of heparan sulfate, dermatan
    sulfate,and chondroitin sulfate
  • FDA approved for prophylaxis in hip replacement
  • Not approved for HIT but extensive experience in
    HIT

74
HIT Treatment- Danaparoid
  • 10 cross-reactivity with anti-heparin Ab but the
    clinical significance is uncertain
  • Renally cleared
  • Monitoring with Anti Xa levels recommended for
  • Pts lt55 or gt90 kg
  • Renal insufficiency
  • After 2-3d of treatment
  • During CP bypass

75
HIT Treatment- Danaparoid
  • No antidote for bleeding
  • Long half life 17-24 hrs
  • No readily available test to monitor
    anticoagulant effect
  • Incidence of major bleeding 3.1

76
HIT Treatment- Danaparoid
  • Acute thrombosis- IV bolus 1250-3700u
  • Then 400u/hr x 4hrs
  • Then 300u/hr x 4 hrs
  • Then 150-200u/hr
  • Thrombosis gt5d ago bolus 1250u IV then 750-1250u
    SQ q8-12hrs
  • DVT prophylaxis
  • lt90kg 750u SQ q8hr acute HIT, q12hr recent HIT
  • gt90kg 1250u SQ q8hr or q12hr

77
HIT Treatment- Lepirudin
  • Brand Refludan
  • Recombinant hirudin produced from leech salivary
    glands
  • FDA approved for tx of HIT with thrombosis (first
    approved HIT drug)
  • Acts directly on circulating and clot-bound
    thrombin

78
HIT Treatment- Lepirudin
  • Renally cleared- specialized dosing based on CrCl
  • Anticoagulant effect lasts 40 min in Nl pts
  • Adequate circulating levels documented by PTT
  • Target PTT 1.5-2.5 x control
  • Slow IV bolus .4mg/kg up to 110 kg then infusion
    .15mg/kg

79
HIT Treatment- Lepirudin
  • Anti-lepirudin Ab develop commonly
  • may impair renal clearance of active drug
  • Monitor frequent PTT
  • Has been successfully administered SQ after
    thrombosis stabilized by IV treatment

80
HIT Treatment- Argatroban
  • Direct thrombin inhibitor
  • Recently FDA approved for HIT
  • Short half-life of 24min
  • Monitored by PTT or ACT
  • PTT returns to Nl 2hr after stopping it
  • Steady state reached in 1-3 hrs
  • No antidote to bleeding

81
HIT Treatment- Argatroban
  • Hepatically cleared- specialized dosing in
    hepatic insufficiency
  • Start 2mcg/kg/min IV and adjust to maintain PTT
    1.5-3 x control
  • Can also increase PT so must stop infusion for
    4-6 hrs remeasure PT to assess coumadin therapy

82
HIT Treatment- Bivalirudin
  • Brand Angiomax
  • Has been used in pts with HIT undergoing PTCA
  • Use has been limited to date

83
HIT Treatment on the Horizon
  • Desirudin
  • Melagatran
  • Fondaparinux

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HIT- Renal Failure
  • Best choice is argatroban for HIT tx but no
    studies for use in hemodialysis in place of
    heparin
  • Recent article in Pharmacotherapy reviewed
    studies to date suggestion lepirudin my be
    removed by hemodialysis, hemofiltration, or
    plasmapheresis using specific membrane materials

87
HIT- Prevention
  • LMWH and heparinoids are associated with much
    lower incidence of HIT
  • Best prevention is judicious use of UFH or
    substitution of LMWH when appropriate
  • Limit heparin tx to lt5d
  • Start coumadin early to minimize heparin tx
  • Do not start coumadin in pts with HIT until
    thrombocytopenia resolves
  • Do not give LMWH after HIT develops with UFH

88
Use of Heparin after HIT
  • Can use heparin if
  • HIT Ab no longer detectable
  • Heparin used for short duration during surgery
    only (ex CP bypass) with other anticoagulants
    postop

89
Thank You for you Attention
  • Have a great day!
  • A copy of this presentation will be made
    available in the library for anyone interested

90
References
  • Warkentin,T. Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia,
    Part 1 The diagnostic clues. Journal of Critical
    Illness. 200217(5)172-178.
  • Coutre MD, Steven. Heparin-Induced
    Thrombocytopenia. UpToDate online 10.1. Nov 30,
    2001.
  • Landaw MD, Stephen. Approach to the patient with
    Thrombocytopenia. UpToDate 9.1. Sept 22, 2000.

91
References
  • Rice, Lawrence et al. Delayed-Onset
    Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia. Ann Intern Med
    2002136210-215.
  • Warkentin MD, T and John Kelton MD.
    Delayed-Onset Heparin- Induced Thrombocytopenia
    and Thrombosis. Ann Intern Med
    2001135502-506.
  • Eichler, Petra, et al. The New ID-Heparin/PF4
    Antibody test for rapid detection of
    heparin-induced antibodies in comparison with
    functional and antigenic assays. British Journal
    of Haematology. 2002116887-891.

92
References
  • Cines MD, Douglas. Heparin-Induced
    Thrombocytopenia and Thrombosis. Platelets An
    Update on Diagnosis and Management of
    Thrombocytopenia disorders. American Society of
    Hematology. Hematology. 2001. 295-305.
  • Liu MD, Jayson, et al. Patency of Coronary
    Artery Bypass Grafts in Patients with
    Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia. The American
    Journal of Cardiology. 200289 979-981.

93
References
  • Dager, William and Richard White. Treatment of
    Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia. The Annals of
    Pharmacotherapy. 200236489-503.
  • Willey, Michelle, deDenus, Simon and Sarah
    Spinler. Removal of Lepirudin, a Recombinant
    Hirudin, by Hemodialysis, Hemofiltration, or
    Plasmapheresis. Pharmacotherapy
    200222(4)492-499.
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