Coagulopathy in Beta-Thalassemia: Current Understanding and Future Perspectives M. Domenica Cappellini1, Khaled M. Musallam2, Alessia Marcon1, and Ali T. Taher2 1Universitá di
Milano, Policlinico Foundation IRCCS, Milan, Italy
2Department of Internal Medicine, Hematology-Oncology Division, American University of Beirut Medical Centre, Beirut, Lebanon Correspondence
to:
Maria Domenica Cappellini, MD. Professor of Medicine, Universitá di
Milano, Fondazione Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico, Mangiagalli, Regina
Elena IRCCS, Milan, Italy. Tel/Fax: +393477885455. E-mail: maria.cappellini@unimi.it
Published: December 29, 2009 Received: Dcember 28, 2009 Accepted: December 28, 2009 Medit J Hemat Infect Dis 2009, 1(1): e2009029; DOI 10.4084/MJHID.2009.029 This article is available from: http://www.mjhid.org/article/view/5250 This is an Open Access article
distributed under the terms of the
Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any
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Abstract
As
the life expectancy of β-thalassemia patients has markedly improved
over the last decade, several new complications are being recognized.
The presence of a high incidence of thromboembolic events, mainly in
thalassemia intermedia patients, has led to the identification of a
hypercoagulable state in thalassemia. In this review, the molecular and
cellular mechanisms leading to hypercoagulability in thalassemia are
highlighted, and the current clinical experience is summarized.
Recommendations for thrombosis prophylaxis are also discussed.
Introduction
Although once considered a fatal disease, the life expectancy of thalassemia major (TM) patients has markedly improved over the last few years, as a result of regular blood transfusions and compliance with tight iron chelation therapy [1]. However, TM patients still suffer from many complications of their chronic disease, and a series of serious previously undescribed complications are now being acknowledged, including thrombosis [2]. Patients with thalassemia intermedia (TI) have, in general, a milder clinical phenotype than those with TM and remain largely transfusion independent [3]. The pathophysiology of TI is characterized by extravascular hemolysis, with the release into the peripheral circulation of damaged red blood cells (RBCs) and erythroid precursors because of a high degree of ineffective erythropoiesis [2]. This has also been recently attributed to severe complications such as pulmonary hypertension (PHT) and thromboembolic phenomena [2]. This review summarises current knowledge of the clinical and pathophysiological characteristics of hypercoagulability in thalassemia patients and highlights available strategies to prevent the associated thromboemoblic events (TEE). Pathogenesis: Guided by clinical observation, diverse factors contributing to the hypercoagulable state in patients with thalassemia have been identified (Figure 1)[2]. In most cases, a combination of these abnormalities leads to clinical thrombosis. Among cellular factors, platelet activation contributes to a significant extent. The medical literature is rich in evidence suggesting that patients with thalassemia have activated platelets. Moreover, flow cytometric studies have also confirmed the chronic platelet activation status. In thalassemia, there is evidence of increased platelet aggregation [4], an increased proportion of platelets expressing CD62P (P-selectin) and CD63 [5-6], and a shortened platelet survival due to enhanced platelet consumption (especially in splenectomized patients)[7-8]. Alteration in RBCs, namely the oxidation of globin subunits in thalassemia erythroid cells, leads to the formation of hemichromes. Hemichromes bind to or modify various components of the mature RBC membrane, such as protein band [3], ankyrin, and spectrin. After the precipitation of hemichromes, heme disintegrates, and toxic nontransferrin-bound iron species are released from the heme disintegration. The resulting free iron catalyzes the formation of reactive oxygen species. Iron-dependent oxidation of membrane proteins and formation of red-cell ‘‘senescence’’ antigens such as phosphatidylserine cause thalassemic red cells to be rigid and deformed and to aggregate, resulting in premature cell removal [9-13]. Studies have shown that thalassemic RBCs may be a source of negatively charged phospholipids, which can eventually increase thrombin generation [14-15]. This was verified by experiments that showed that annexin V, a protein with high affinity and specificity for anionic phospholipids, could block the procoagulant effect of isolated thalassemic RBCs [15-16]. Several studies have demonstrated that RBCs from thalassemic patients also show enhanced cohesiveness and aggregability. These abnormalities have been reduced to normal range after the patients have received a blood transfusion [15]. The finding of elevated levels of endothelial adhesion proteins (E-selectin [ELAM-1], intercellular adhesion molecule-1 [ICAM-1] and von Willebrand factor [VWF]) and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 [VCAM-1] in thalassemic patients suggested that endothelial injury or activation may be a feature of this genetic disease which also plays an important role in the recruitment of white blood cells and RBCs and promote thrombosis at vascular inflammation sites, vessel obstruction, tissue hypoxia and death [17-22]. More recently, it was shown that microparticles of red blood cell origins were elevated in patients with TI vs. controls; these have a potential to aggravate thrombotic events [23]. Clinical observations have suggested that splenectomy in TI can contribute to an increased susceptibility to thrombosis [24-26]. The development of these complications has been ascribed to the presence of high platelet counts following splenectomy and/or to increased number of abnormal RBCs [27-29] .In splenectomized TI patients, thrombin generation was significantly higher than in control subjects and patients who had not undergone splenectomy [26]. From the available data, DNA mutations do not appear to play an important role in the pathogenesis of thrombosis observed in thalassemia. In two studies from the Eastern Mediterranean region the presence of factor V Leiden, prothrombin mutation, and methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) mutations was not significantly correlated with the thrombotic risk [30-31]. However, many investigators have reported changes in the levels of coagulation factors and inhibitors in thalassemic patients. Prothrombin fragment 1.2 (F1.2), a marker of thrombin generation, is elevated in TI patients. The status of protein C and protein S was investigated in thalassemia in many studies and generally they were found to be decreased; this might be responsible for the occurrence of TEE in thalassemic patients [26]. The presence of anti-phospholipid antibodies (aPL) has been reported in the serum of thalassemia patients. However, the exact nature of these antibodies and their relation to coexistent hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is still under investigation [32]. Other pathogenetic mechanisms have been correlated with hypercoagulability in thalassemia and these include cardiac dysfunction, hormonal deficiencies and liver dysfunction [2]. The pathophysiological roles of hemolysis and the dysregulation of nitric oxide homeostasis are correlated with pulmonary hypertension in sickle cell disease and in thalassemia. Nitric oxide binds soluble guanylate cyclase, which converts GTP to cGMP, relaxing vascular smooth muscle and causing vasodilatation. When plasma hemoglobin liberated from intravascularly hemolyzed sickle erythrocytes consumes nitric oxide, the balance is shifted toward vasoconstriction. Pulmonary hypertension is aggravated and in sickle cell disease, it is linked to the intensity of hemolysis. Whether the same mechanism contributes to hypercoagulability in thalassemia is not yet known and needs to be investigated [33]. Clinical Impact: There are relatively few epidemiological data on the overall frequency of TEE in patients with thalassemia (Table 1). The largest clinical study to date 25 analyzed data from 8860 thalassemia patients (6670 TM and 2190 TI). The authors demonstrated that TEE occurred 4.38 times more frequently in TI than TM (p < 0.001), with more venous events occurring in TI and more arterial events occurring in TM. Moreover, patients with TI who developed a TEE were mostly splenectomized, non-transfused, and had a haemoglobin level below 9 g/dl. The study described age beyond 20 years, splenectomy, family history of TEE and previous TEE as the main risk factors for developing thrombosis in the study group [25]. In another series of TI patients, [24] patients (29%) developed either deep vein thrombosis (DVT), pulmonary embolism, or portal vein thrombosis during a 10-year follow up [26]. All patients except one had undergone splenectomy. A study on survival and causes of death in TM, carried out in Italy at the end of the 1980s, indicated TEE as the primary cause of death in four of 159 (2.5%) transfusion-dependent thalassemic patients [34]. In a recent survey involving nine Italian pediatric thalassemia centers, TEE was observed in 4% of 683 patients with TM and in 9.6% of 52 patients with TI [35]. Even more recently, data from seven Italian centers on 720 patients with TM, 1.1% of the patients had thrombosis [1]. Logothetis et al. described a “stroke syndrome” and neurological deficits compatible with transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) in about 20% of 138 cases of TM in Greece [36]. Similarly, Borgna Pignatti et al. described TIAs accompanied by a clinical picture of headache, seizures, and hemiparesis in 2.2% of TM patients in Italy [35]. Although the incidence of overt stroke in TM was usually described as higher than TI [25], a study done to assess the rate of silent brain damage in patients with benign hemoglobinopathies reported that 37.5% of patients with TI showed asymptomatic brain damage on brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) [37]. More recently, a brain MRI study on adult, splenectomized TI patients showed a rate of silent white matter lesions as high as 60% [24]. Older age and transfusion naivety were associated with a higher incidence and multiplicity of lesions [24]. Autopsy series in patients with TM and TI describe the presence of DVT, pulmonary embolism and recurrent arterial occlusion, with thrombi in small and large pulmonary vessels [34,38-39]. Autopsies of a large series of patients with Beta-thalassemia/hemoglobin E disease revealed thrombotic lesions in the pulmonary arteries [40]. These pulmonary arterial thromboembolism may have been due to circulating platelet aggregates. Similar findings of multiple microthrombi, which were composed mainly of platelets, were seen in the pulmonary arterioles and microcirculation in autopsies of two splenectomized patients with thalassemia [41]. The aforementioned collective evidence allowed the identification of TEE as an established complication of thalassemia, which is now referred to as a ‘hypercoagulable state’[42]. Recommendations for Management: The higher rate of thrombosis in transfusion-independent TI compared to polytransused TM patients suggests a potential role for transfusions in decreasing the rate of TEE [24-26,35]. The reduction of TEE in adequately transfused patients may be the result of decreased numbers of pathological RBCs exhibiting indices of membrane damage[16]. It should be noted that the benefit of regular blood transfusions is appreciated in the more frequent thromboembolic manifestations in less developed countries with inadequate transfusion resources. Moreover, the higher rate of TEE in splenectomized patients may alter the risk-benefit assessment of splenectomy as a procedure of choice. The available data on the use of anticoagulants, antiplatelet, or other agents in thalassemia are either lacking or involve small, poorly controlled and/or relatively low-quality studies [2]. However, TI patients who experienced a TEE and received aspirin afterwards had a lower recurrence of TEE compared with those who were not taking aspirin, although these differences were not statistically significant [25]. Treatment with the fetal hemoglobin-inducing agents, hydroxycarbmide and decitabine, results decreased plasma markers of thrombin generation. Hydroxycarbamide, specifically approved for the treatment of sickle cell disease, may decrease coagulation activation by reducing phospholipid expression on the surface of both RBCs and platelets and decreasing RBC adhesion to thrombospondin. In addition to being a nitric oxide donor, hydroxycarbamide may also decrease hemostatic activation by its effect in decreasing the white blood cell count and particularly monocytes that express transcription factor [33]. Hydroxycarbamide is only rarely used in thalassemia [43], these patients may experience the benefits because of similar mechanisms described in sickle cell disease. Another approach would be to correct the reactive oxygen species-induced RBC membrane damage using antioxidants, although this approach has not yet been verified in clinical trials. It may also be possible to design a thalassemia-tailored thrombosis risk-assessment model (RAM) to estimate thrombotic risk as a function of intrinsic (e.g. thalassemia type and number of circulating RBC) and extrinsic (e.g. infection, surgery, and splenectomy) factors. Moreover, tests for predisposing factors could also be performed, particularly in high-risk patients. If clinically verified, this type of model could serve as a guideline for possible preventative treatment to decrease the incidence of TEE, which can cause significant morbidity and mortality [2]. In fact, attempts to identify diagnostic tests that will help identify patients at risk are emerging [44], with results that are promising towards establishing an evidence based preventive approach. Conclusion: In conclusion, there are diverse factors contributing to the hypercoagulable state observed in patients with thalassemia. In most cases, a combination of these abnormalities leads to clinical thrombosis. The higher incidence of thrombotic events in TI compared to TM patients is mainly attributed to transfusion naivety and splenectomy, both of which promote an underlying procoagulant activity. Although no clear guidelines exist to establish a prophylactic strategy, an individualized approach that takes into consideration all associated risk factors is advisable. References
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