Antiphospholipid syndrome in northwest Italy (APS Piedmont Cohort): demographic features, risk factors, clinical and laboratory profile

Author:

Bertero MT1,Bazzan M2,Carignola R3,Montaruli B4,Silvestro E1,Sciascia S5,Vaccarino A2,Baldovino S5,Roccatello D5

Affiliation:

1. Immunologia Clinica, AO Ordine Mauriziano

2. Ematologia e Malattie Trombotiche PO Torino Nord Emergenza S. Giovanni Bosco

3. Day Hospital Internistico Centralizzato, AOU San Luigi Gonzaga di Orbassano

4. Patologia Clinica, AO Ordine Mauriziano

5. Centro di Ricerche di Immunopatologia e Documentazione sulle Malattie Rare, PO Torino Nord Emergenza S. Giovanni Bosco, Italy

Abstract

We report the experience from the Antiphospholipid Antibodies (aPL) Regional Consortium in northwest Italy, meant to support clinical research and foster collaboration among health professionals regarding the diagnosis and management of antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) patients. This cohort-study (APS Piedmont Cohort) was designed to register the clinical characteristics at inception and associated immunological manifestations at diagnosis (if any) of patients who strictly fulfilled the current criteria for APS, all recruited at the Piedmont and Valle d'Aosta regions. Clinical and laboratory data from 217 APS patients (171 with vascular events, 33 with pregnancy morbidity and 13 with both), from 16 centres within the geographical area were collected. Venous thrombosis was recorded in 45.6% of patients, arterial thrombosis in 35%, small-vessel thrombosis in 1.12% and mixed arterial and venous thrombosis in the remaining 19.4% of the cases. Pregnancy morbidity included 19 patients with unexplained fetal death beyond the 10th week of pregnancy, 17 with premature birth before the 34th week and 10 with three or more unexplained spontaneous abortions before the 10th week of gestation. This consortium represents an instrument by which to audit clinical practice, to provide counselling to local centres and to sustain future basic and clinical APS research.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Rheumatology

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