Vaccine‐induced immune thrombocytopenia and thrombosis (VITT) following ChAdOx1 nCOV‐19 vaccine has been described, associated with unusual site thrombosis, thrombocytopenia, raised D‐dimer and high titre immunoglobulin‐G (IgG) class anti‐Platelet Factor 4 (PF4) antibodies. Enzyme linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) have been shown to detect anti‐PF4 in patients with VITT, but chemiluminesence assays do not reliably detect them. ELISA assays are not widely available in diagnostic laboratories, and, globally, very few laboratories perform platelet activation assays. Assays which are commercially available in the United Kingdom were evaluated for their ability to identify anti‐PF4 antibodies in samples from patients with suspected VITT. Four IgG‐specific ELISAs, two polyspecific ELISAs and four rapid assays were performed on samples from 43 patients with suspected VITT from across the UK. Cases were identified after referral to the UK Expert Haematology Panel multi‐disciplinary team and categorised into unlikely, possible or probable VITT. We demonstrated that the HemosIL AcuStar HIT‐IgG, HemosIL HIT‐Ab, Diamed PaGIA gel and STic Expert assays have poor sensitivity for VITT in comparison to ELISA. Where these assays are used for heparin induced thrombocytopenia diagnosis, laboratories should ensure that requests for suspected VITT are clearly identified so that an ELISA is performed. No superiority of IgG‐ELISAs over polyspecific‐ELISAs in sensitivity to VITT could be demonstrated. No single ELISA method detected all possible/probable VITT cases; if a single ELISA test is negative, a second ELISA or a platelet activation assay should be considered where there is strong clinical suspicion.
This paper examines the role of complexity in descriptions of the aetiology of common psychiatric disorders. While scientists attest to the discovery of an underlying reality of complex inheritance--the so-called 'witches' brew' of genetic and non-genetic factors--we argue that 'complexity' also performs rhetorical work. In our analysis of scientific review papers (1999-2008), we find a relatively stable genre of accountability in which descriptions of complexity appear to neutralize past failures by incorporating different and sometimes competing methodological perspectives. We identify two temporal strategies: retrospective accounting, which reconstructs a history of psychiatric genetics that deals with the recent failures, citing earlier twin studies as proof of the heritability of common psychiatric disorders; and prospective accounting, which engages in the careful reconstruction of expectations by balancing methodological limitations with moderated optimism. Together, these strategies produce a simple-to-complex narrative that belies the ambivalent nature of complexity. We show that the rhetorical construction of complexity in scientific review papers is oriented to bridging disciplinary boundaries, marshalling new resources and reconstructing expectations that justify delays in gene discovery and risk prediction.
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