Background: Patients with rare inherited bleeding disorders (RBDs) exhibit hemorrhagic symptoms, varying in type and severity, often requiring only on-demand treatment. Prolonged bleeding after invasive procedures is common. Adequate periprocedural therapy may reduce this bleeding risk.Objective: To describe general treatment plans of RBD patients and evaluate the use of peri-procedural hemostatic therapy.
Methods:In the Rare Bleeding Disorders in the Netherlands (RBiN) study, RBD patients from all six Dutch Hemophilia Treatment Centers were included. General treatment plans were extracted from patient files. Patients with a dental or surgical procedure in their history were interviewed about use of peri-procedural treatment and bleeding complications.Results: Two-hundred sixty-three patients with a rare coagulation factor deficiency or fibrinolytic disorder were included. Eighty-four percent had a documented general treatment plan. General treatment plans of patients with the same RBD were heterogeneous, particularly in factor XI deficiency.Overall, 308 dental and 408 surgical procedures were reported. Bleeding occurred in 50% of dental and 53% of surgical procedures performed without hemostatic treatment and in 28% of dental and 19% of surgical procedures performed with hemostatic treatment. Not only patients with severe RBDs, but also patients with mild deficiencies, experienced increased bleeding without proper hemostatic treatment.
Conclusion:Large heterogeneity in general treatment plans of RBD patients was found. Bleeding after invasive procedures was reported frequently, both before and after RBD diagnosis, irrespective of factor activity levels and particularly when
Patients with type 1 and type 2 von Willebrand disease (VWD) can be treated with desmopressin. Although a previous study has shown that the location of the causative VWF gene variant is associated with desmopressin response in type 1 VWD, the association between variants in the VWF gene and desmopressin response is not yet fully understood. Our primary aim was to compare desmopressin response in type 1 VWD patients with and without a VWF gene variant. Secondly, we investigated whether desmopressin response depends on specific VWF gene variants in type 1 and type 2 VWD. We included 250 patients from the WiN study; 72 type 1 without a VWF gene variant, 108 type 1 with a variant, 45 type 2A, 16 type 2M and 9 type 2N patients. VWF gene was analyzed with ion semiconductor sequencing and MLPA. Complete response to desmopressin was observed in all type 1 VWD patients without a variant, 64.3% of type 1 patients with a variant and 31.3% of type 2 patients (p<0.001). Despite a large inter-individual variability in desmopressin response, patients with the same variant had comparable desmopressin responses. For instance, in six type 1 patients with exon 4-5 deletion, mean VWF activity at 1 hour after desmopressin was 0.81 IU/mL with a coefficient of variation of 22.9%. In conclusion, all type 1 VWD patients without a VWF gene variant respond to desmopressin. In type 1 and type 2 VWD patients with a VWF variant, desmopressin response highly depends on the VWF gene variants.
We present a rare case of acquired von Willebrand syndrome (AVWS) caused by a mantle cell lymphoma. A 61-year-old male suffered from recurrent bleeding symptoms since a few months. Initially, physical examination was normal. von Willebrand factor antigen (VWF:Ag) level and factor VIII activity (FVIII:C) were low (0.31 IU/ml and 0.43 IU/ml, resp.). Ristocetin cofactor activity (VWF:RCo) was 0.09 IU/ml, and collagen binding activity (VWF:CB) was 0.10 IU/ml. VWF:RCo/VWF:Ag ratio was 0.29, and RIPA value was normal. Highest molecular weight VWF multimers were absent. A diagnosis of von Willebrand Disease (VWD) type 2A was made. However, no genetic mutation was found. No inhibitory antibodies against VWF or factor VIII were detected. A few months later, cervical, axillary, and inguinal lymphadenopathy was found on physical examination. A CT scan confirmed multiple enlarged lymph nodes, and a clonal B-cell population matching a mantle cell lymphoma was detected in the bone marrow. Chemoimmunotherapy resulted in a very good partial remission and concomitantly in a rapid decrease of bleeding problems and complete normalization of FVIII:C and VWF:Ag. The diagnosis of AVWS cannot be rejected by negative mixing studies due to difficulties in the detection of autoantibodies and because of a highly heterogeneous pathogenesis of AVWS. When the suspicion of AVWS is high, an extensive investigation should be performed to find the underlying cause.
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