1. Deep vein thrombosis during enoxaparin prophylactic treatment in a young pregnant woman homozygous for factor V Leiden and heterozygous for the G127 ← A mutation in the thrombomodulin gene
- Author
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Uzan S, A . Magdelaine, F. Soubrier, Coulet F, N. Berkane, Girot R, and E. Verdy
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Thrombomodulin ,Deep vein ,Pregnancy Complications, Cardiovascular ,medicine.disease_cause ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Factor V Leiden ,Humans ,Point Mutation ,Enoxaparin ,Allele ,Mutation ,business.industry ,Anticoagulants ,Factor V ,Hematology ,General Medicine ,Thrombophlebitis ,medicine.disease ,Thrombosis ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,business ,Enoxaparin sodium ,Protein C ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Variability of thrombotic disease among individuals homozygous for factor V Leiden has been described. It has been shown that some thrombotic patients carry an additional genetic risk factor such as protein C, protein S, antithrombin deficiency or the G20210A mutation on the prothrombin gene. The occurrence of a deep vein thrombosis during enoxaparin prophylactic treatment in a pregnant woman homozygous for factor V Leiden, without other known prothrombotic genetic factors, led us to investigate her thrombomodulin gene. We found that the patient was heterozygous for the previously described G 127 → A mutation, which results in an Ala 25 → Thr substitution. Furthermore, for this patient, the allelic combination at the 1418 polymorphic site was C/T, which predicts an Ala 455 → Val replacement. Although larger studies are required, this case report suggests that thrombomodulin gene mutations could be an additional genetic risk factor for thrombosis in carriers of the factor V Leiden mutation.
- Published
- 2000