Thrombin generation in patients with COVID-19 with and without thromboprophylaxis
Author:
Campello Elena1, Bulato Cristiana1, Spiezia Luca1, Boscolo Annalisa2, Poletto Francesco1, Cola Marco1, Gavasso Sabrina1, Simion Chiara1, Radu Claudia Maria1, Cattelan Annamaria3, Tiberio Ivo4, Vettor Roberto5, Navalesi Paolo2, Simioni Paolo1
Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine , General Medicine and Thrombotic and Haemorrhagic Diseases Unit, Padova University Hospital , Padova , Italy 2. Department of Medicine , Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Unit, Padova University Hospital , Padova , Italy 3. Division of Infectious and Tropical Diseases , Padova University Hospital , Padova , Italy 4. Intensive Care Central Unit , Padova University Hospital , Padova , Italy 5. Department of Medicine , Third Chair of Internal Medicine, Padova University Hospital , Padova , Italy
Abstract
Abstract
Objectives
Thrombin generation (TG) with and without thrombomodulin (TM) was evaluated in COVID-19 patients with different disease severity and thromboprophylaxis regimen, in order to understand the prothrombotic profile.
Methods
We enrolled consecutive patients with confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 admitted to Medical Departments (MD) or Intensive Care Units (ICU), and 54 healthy controls.
Results
Eighty-nine patients were included (mean age 60.4±16.1 years, 68.5% male); 33.7% admitted to ICU. Twenty-four patients (26.9%) were enrolled before thromboprophylaxis administration; 45 patients (50.6%) received standard and 20 (22.5%) intermediate sub-therapeutic dose thromboprophylaxis. Overall, patients with COVID-19 showed a TG profile comparable to that of healthy subjects (i.e. comparable peak height, endogenous thrombin potential [ETP] with and without TM). The only exception was lag time and time to peak, prolonged in COVID-19 patients vs. controls. MD patients showed a similar TG profile to healthy controls, and ICU patients showed significantly decrease ETP (p=0.030) compared to MD. As for thromboprophylaxis, TG profile was significantly increased in COVID-19 patients without thromboprophylaxis vs. controls and vs. those with thromboprophylaxis. In this latter group, ETP inhibition was significantly decreased (p=0.0003) and positively correlated with anti-Xa activity (r=0.49, p=0.0017). However, patients with thromboprophylaxis had similar TG profile vs. controls. Intermediate dose thromboprophylaxis more effectively inhibited TG in severe COVID-19 patients by increasing ETP inhibition via ETP with TM reduction vs. standard dose.
Conclusions
COVID-19 patients showed increased TG at diagnosis. Standard thromboprophylaxis reduced TG to levels of healthy controls. Intermediate sub-therapeutic thromboprophylaxis more effectively inhibited TG by decreasing ETP with TM.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
Biochemistry, medical,Clinical Biochemistry,General Medicine
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