Elevated levels of tissue factor pathway inhibitor in patients with mild to moderate bleeding tendency

Author:

Mehic Dino1ORCID,Tolios Alexander234,Hofer Stefanie1,Ay Cihan1,Haslacher Helmuth5ORCID,Rejtö Judit1ORCID,Ouwehand Willem H.678ORCID,Downes Kate679,Haimel Matthias1011ORCID,Pabinger Ingrid1,Gebhart Johanna1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Clinical Division of Hematology and Hemostaseology, Department of Medicine I,

2. Department of Blood Group Serology and Transfusion Medicine,

3. Center for Physiology and Pharmacology,

4. Institute for Artificial Intelligence and Decision Support, Center for Medical Statistics, Informatics and Intelligent Systems, and

5. Department of Laboratory Medicine, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria;

6. Department of Haematology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom;

7. National Health Service (NHS) Blood and Transplant, Cambridge, United Kingdom;

8. Wellcome Sanger Institute, Wellcome Genome Campus, Cambridge, United Kingdom;

9. East Midlands and East of England Genomic Laboratory Hub, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Cambridge, United Kingdom;

10. CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna, Austria; and

11. Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Rare and Undiagnosed Diseases, Vienna, Austria

Abstract

Abstract High levels of tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI), caused by a longer TFPIα half-life after binding to a factor V splice variant and variants in the F5 gene, were recently identified in 2 families with an as-yet-unexplained bleeding tendency. This study aimed to investigate free TFPIα in a well-characterized cohort of 620 patients with mild to moderate bleeding tendencies and its association to genetic alterations in the F5 gene. TFPIα levels were higher in patients with bleeding compared with healthy controls (median [interquartile range], 8.2 [5.5-11.7] vs 7.8 [4.3-11.1]; P = .026). A higher proportion of patients had free TFPIα levels more than or equal to the 95th percentile compared with healthy controls (odds ratio [OR] [95% confidence interval (CI)], 2.82 [0.98-8.13]). This was pronounced in the subgroup of patients in whom no bleeding disorder could be identified (bleeding of unknown cause [BUC; n = 420]; OR [95% CI], 3.03 [1.02-8.98]) and in platelet function defects (PFDs) (n = 121; OR [95% CI], 3.47 [1.09-11.08]). An increase in free TFPIα was associated with a mild delay in thrombin generation (prolonged lag time and time to peak), but not with alterations in routinely used global clotting tests. We could neither identify new or known genetic variations in the F5 gene that are associated with free TFPIα levels, nor an influence of the single-nucleotide variant rs10800453 on free TFPIα levels in our patient cohort. An imbalance of natural coagulation inhibitors such as TFPIα could be an underlying cause or contributor for unexplained bleeding, which is most probably multifactorial in a majority of patients.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Hematology

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