Back to Search Start Over

Antiprothrombin Antibodies

Authors :
Polona Žigon
Aleš Ambrožič
Borut Božič
Saša Čučnik
Source :
Zdravniški Vestnik, Vol 84, Iss 3 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Slovenian Medical Association, 2015.

Abstract

In patients with the antiphospholipid syndrome (APS), the presence of a group of pathogenic autoantibodies called antiphospholipid antibodies causes thrombosis and pregnancy complications. The most frequent antigenic target of antiphospholipid antibodies are phospholipid bound β2-glycoprotein 1 (β2GPI) and prothrombin. The international classification criteria for APS connect the occurrence of thrombosis and/or obstetric complications together with the persistence of lupus anticoagulant, anti-cardiolipin antibodies (aCL) and antibodies against β2GPI (anti-β2GPI) into APS. Current trends for the diagnostic evaluation of APS patients propose determination of multiple antiphospholipid antibodies, among them also anti-prothrombin antibodies, to gain a common score which estimates the risk for thrombosis in APS patients. Antiprothrombin antibodies are common in APS patients and are sometimes the only antiphospholipid antibodies being elevated. Methods for their determination differ and have not yet been standardized. Many novel studies confirmed method using phosphatidylserine/prothrombin (aPS/PT ELISA) as an antigen on solid phase encompass higher diagnostic accuracy compared to method using prothrombin alone (aPT ELISA). Our research group developed an in-house aPS/PT ELISA with increased analytical sensitivity which enables the determination of all clinically relevant antiprothrombin antibodies. aPS/PT exhibited the highest percentage of lupus anticoagulant activity compared to aCL and anti-β2GPI. aPS/PT antibodies measured with the in-house method associated with venous thrombosis and presented the strongest independent risk factor for the presence of obstetric complications among all tested antiphospholipid antibodies.

Details

Language :
English, Slovenian
ISSN :
13180347 and 15810224
Volume :
84
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Zdravniški Vestnik
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.346acbc4ec1349a88fe4b1e09e59c93c
Document Type :
article