Author:
Sameshima Tomohiro,Ashina Mariko,Fukuda Takuya,Kido Takumi,Abe Shinya,Watanabe Yuko,Sato Itsuko,Yano Yoshihiko,Tanimura Kenji,Nagase Hiroaki,Nozu Kandai,Fujioka Kazumichi
Abstract
AbstractProtein induced by vitamin K absence or antagonist-II (PIVKA-II) is avitamin K (VK) deficiency indicator in neonates. However, PIVKA-II detection frequency in neonatal blood at birth and the correlation between PIVKA-II and gestational age are unclear. We retrospectively analyzed infants admitted to our institution between June 1, 2018, and March 31, 2022, whose clinical and PIVKA-II data were available, and classified them into preterm and term infant groups. Overall incidence of PIVKA-II-positive cases (≥ 50 mAU/mL) was 42.8%, including 0.6% apparent VK deficiency (≥ 5000 mAU/mL), 3.1% experimental VK deficiency (1000–4999 mAU/mL), and 10.7% latent VK deficiency (200–999 mAU/mL) cases. Incidence of PIVKA-II-positive cases was significantly higher in the term group than in the preterm group (49.4% vs. 29.7%, p < 0.001). Gestational age correlated with PIVKA-II levels (r2 = 0.117, p < 0.0001). Median serum PIVKA-II levels and incidence of PIVKA-II-positive cases (≥ 50 mAU/mL, 16.4%) were lower at 5 days after birth than at birth, possibly reflecting the postnatal VK prophylaxis impact. Only one infant was diagnosed with VK deficiency bleeding (PIVKA-II levels, at birth: 10,567 mAU/mL; at day 5: 2418 mAU/mL). Thus, serum PIVKA-II levels after birth weakly correlated with gestational age. VK deficiency was more common in term infants than in preterm infants.
Funder
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC