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Aptamer-modified FXa generation assays to investigate hypercoagulability in plasma from patients with ischemic heart disease

Authors :
Giovanna Marchetti
Annalisa Castagna
Barry Woodhams
Marcello Baroni
Francesco Bernardi
Oliviero Olivieri
Nicola Martinelli
Barbara Lunghi
Mirko Pinotti
Filippo Stefanoni
Source :
Thrombosis Research. 189:140-146
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Background High plasma levels of activated Factor VII-Antithrombin complex (FVIIa-AT) have been associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular mortality in patients with stable coronary artery disease (CAD). Objectives To investigate if FVIIa-AT levels are associated with activated factor X generation (FXaG) in modified assays. Patients/methods Forty CAD patients were characterized for FVIIa-AT levels by ELISA and for FXaG in plasma. Novel fluorogenic FXaG assays, based on aptamers inhibiting thrombin and/or tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI), were set up. Results FXaG correlated with FVIIa-AT levels (RAUC = 0.393, P = 0.012). The combination of thrombin inhibition and FXaG potentiation by using anti-thrombin and anti-TFPI aptamers, respectively, favors the study of time parameters. The progressive decrease in lag time from the lowest to the highest FVIIa-AT quartile was magnified by combining TFPI and thrombin inhibitory aptamers, thus supporting increased FXaG activity in the coagulation initiation phase. By exploring FXaG rates across FVIIa-AT quartiles, the largest relative differences were detectable at the early times (the highest versus the lowest quartile; 5.0-fold, P = 0.005 at 45 s; 3.5-fold, P = 0.001 at 55 s), and progressively decreased over time (2.3-fold, P = 0.002 at 75 s; 1.8-fold, P = 0.008 at 95 s; 1.6-fold, P = 0.022 at 115 s). Association between high FVIIa-AT levels and increased FXaG was independent of F7 −323 A1/A2 polymorphism influencing FVIIa-AT levels. Conclusions High FVIIa-AT plasma levels were associated with increased FXaG. Hypercoagulability features were specifically detectable in the coagulation initiation phase, which may have implications for cardiovascular risk prediction by either FVIIa-AT complex measurement or modified FXaG assays.

Details

ISSN :
00493848
Volume :
189
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Thrombosis Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7672b81c8556ef4bf926773dadc89d18
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.thromres.2020.03.007