A prospective cohort study of light transmission platelet aggregometry for bleeding disorders: Is testing native platelet-rich plasma non-inferior to testing platelet count adjusted samples? (original) (raw)
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Thrombosis and Haemostasis, 2019
Several in vitro platelet function tests are available for the diagnosis of inherited platelet function disorders. Currently, the light transmission aggregometry (LTA) is recommended as one of the first-step tests. LTA is available in most specialized hemostasis laboratories. Although the LTA is accepted as a ‘gold standard’ assay for the evaluation of platelet function, its standardization in the clinical practice is still challenging. The GTH-based THROMKID-Plus Study Group has performed an inter-laboratory trial in Germany and Austria. Five different agonists were selected according to the Scientific and Standardization Committee/International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis recommendations and shipped in 3 different sets (one should represent a healthy control and two should simulate platelet function disorders) to 15 specialized laboratories in Germany and Austria. Agonists were analyzed by APACT or PAP4/8 aggregometer using platelet-rich plasma from healthy donors. In ad...
Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, 2013
Light transmission aggregometry (LTA) is the most common method used to assess platelet function. However, there is no universal standard for its performance. The Platelet Physiology Subcommittee of the Scientific and Standardization Committee (SSC) of the International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis formed a working party of experts with the aim of producing a series of consensus recommendations for standardizing LTA. Due to a lack of investigations that directly compared different methodologies to perform LTA studies, there were insufficient data to develop evidence-based guidelines. Therefore, the RAND method was used, which obtains a formal consensus among experts about the appropriateness of health care interventions, particularly when scientific evidence is absent, scarce and/or heterogeneous. Using this approach, each expert scored as "appropriate", "uncertain" or "inappropriate" a series of statements about the practice of LTA, which included pre-analytical variables, blood collection, blood processing, methodological details, choice of agonists and the evaluation and reporting of results. After presentation and public discussion at SSC meetings, the assessments were further refined to produce final consensus recommendations. Before delivering the recommendations, a formal literature review was performed using a series of defined search terms about LTA. Of the 1830 potentially relevant studies identified, only 14 publications were considered to be actually relevant for review. Based upon the additional information, 6 consensus statements were slightly modified. The final statements were presented and discussed at the SSC Meeting in Cairo (2010) and formed the basis of a consensus document, which is the subject of the present report.
Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, 2014
Mild platelet function disorders (PFDs) are complex and difficult to diagnose. The current gold standard test, light transmission aggregometry (LTA), including lumi-aggregometry, is time and labour intensive and blood samples must be processed within a limited time after venepuncture. Furthermore, many subjects with suspected PFDs do not show a platelet abnormality on LTA. To assess the diagnostic potential of an easy-to-use remote platelet function test (RPFT) as a diagnostic pre-test for suspected PFDs. A remote platelet function test was compared with lumi-aggregometry in participants recruited to the Genotyping and Phenotyping of Platelets Study (GAPP, ISRCTN 77951167). For the RPFT, whole blood was stimulated with platelet agonists, stabilized with PAMFix and returned to the central laboratory for analysis of P-selectin and CD63 by flow cytometry. For the 61 study participants (42 index cases and 19 relatives) there was a good agreement between lumi-aggregometry and the RPFT, with diagnosis being concordant in 84% of cases (κ = 0.668, P < 0.0001). According to both tests, 29 participants were identified to have a deficiency in platelet function and 22 participants appeared normal. There were four participants where lumi-aggregometry revealed a defect but the RPFT did not, and six participants where the RPFT detected an abnormal platelet response that was not identified by lumi-aggregometry. This study suggests that the RPFT could be an easy-to-use pre-test to select which participants with bleeding disorders would benefit from extensive platelet phenotyping. Further development and evaluation of the test are warranted in a wider population of patients with excessive bleeding and could provide informative screening tests for PFDs.
Thrombosis Research, 2009
Introduction: Hyporesponsiveness to antiplatelet agents has been linked to an increased risk of major adverse cardiovascular events. However, light transmission aggregometry (LTA), the gold standard methodology for assessing platelet function, requires expertise and is labour-intensive, which render its use in clinical settings impractical. We assessed whether platelet count drop (PCD), a technique widely available in any haematology laboratory, could replace LTA in testing for inhibition of platelet aggregation induced by antiplatelet agents. Materials and methods: One hundred and sixty-one coronary artery disease patients taking aspirin alone and 91 patients taking a combination of aspirin and clopidogrel were enrolled. Platelet aggregation was measured by LTA and PCD stimulated with 1.6 mM of arachidonic acid (AA) for aspirin and 5 and 20 μM of adenosine diphosphate (ADP) for clopidogrel. Results: Correlation between AA-induced LTA and PCD was inexistent (r = -0.043, p = 0.587), while correlation between ADP-induced LTA and PCD was low (r = 0.374, p b 0.0001 for ADP 5 μM and r = 0.402, p b 0001 for ADP 20 μM). PCD, whether stimulated with AA or ADP, overestimated platelet aggregation as assessed by LTA, by 13-18%. The wide 95% limits of agreement suggest that the assays can disagree significantly in individual patients. Conclusions: Although the PCD method is widely available in non-specialized laboratories, our results demonstrate that there is poor correlation with the current gold standard, i.e. LTA. Thus, PCD should not be used in replacement of LTA to assess antiplatelet responsiveness.
British journal of …, 2009
of mild platelet function disorders. Reliability and usefulness of light transmission platelet aggregation and serotonin secretion assays Mucocutaneous bleeding (MCB) is the hallmark of hereditary disorders of primary hemostasis. Among them, mild platelet function defects (PFD) and von Willebrand disease (VWD) are the most frequently diagnosed (Favaloro, 2007; Quiroga et al, 2007). Most inherited PFD have in common mild defects of platelet aggregation and secretion, which are often difficult to distinguish from tests in low-normal ranges and whose underlying molecular mechanisms are largely unknown (Cattaneo, 2003; Rao et al, 2004). Light transmission platelet aggregometry (PA), initially described in 1962 (Born, 1962; O¢Brien, 1962), is still the gold standard for diagnosis of most PFD (Michelson et al, 2006). This milestone discovery, at a time of increasing knowledge and interest in platelet function and dysfunction, led to its indiscriminate, non-normalized use at the clinical level. As early as 1976, the Division of Blood Diseases and Resources, National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, sponsored a Workshop on platelet function testing (Day et al, 1976) whose proceedings gave detailed information and discussion on technical aspects of the assays used to explore platelet function at that time. Twelve years later, the British Committee for Standards in Haematology (BCSH) Haemostasis and Thrombosis Task Force (1988) published detailed guidelines for performing and interpreting aggregation tests in platelet-rich plasma (PRP). However, two recent international surveys revealed that laboratory practices to evaluate PFD were highly variable and that previous recommendations and guidelines had not been widely adopted (Moffat
Assessment of platelet function on the routine coagulation analyzer Sysmex CS-2000i
Platelets, 2018
Light transmission aggregometry (LTA) is considered as the gold standard for testing platelet function in the setting of both platelet disorders suspicion and response to antiplatelet therapy evaluation. LTA requires however specialized equipment, substantial blood sample volumes, is technically challenging and time-consuming. To evaluate an automated platelet aggregation method performed on a routine coagulation analyzer Sysmex CS-2000i. 46 patients presenting a bleeding syndrome and 62 patients with acute coronary syndrome receiving dual antiplatelet therapy were studied in total. Platelet aggregations were performed on CS-2000i equipped with a dedicated software and on APACT-4004 (Elitech, France) as the reference instrument. Aggregation was measured by monitoring the changes in light absorbance occurring in response to ADP 2.5, 5 and 10µM, collagen 3.3 µg/mL, epinephrin 10µM, ristocetin 1.25 mg/mL and arachidonic acid 0.5 mg/mL in platelet rich plasma (PRP). PRP were tested simu...
Platelet Aggregometry Testing: Molecular Mechanisms, Techniques and Clinical Implications
International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 2017
Platelets play a fundamental role in normal hemostasis, while their inherited or acquired dysfunctions are involved in a variety of bleeding disorders or thrombotic events. Several laboratory methodologies or point-of-care testing methods are currently available for clinical and experimental settings. These methods describe different aspects of platelet function based on platelet aggregation, platelet adhesion, the viscoelastic properties during clot formation, the evaluation of thromboxane metabolism or certain flow cytometry techniques. Platelet aggregometry is applied in different clinical settings as monitoring response to antiplatelet therapies, the assessment of perioperative bleeding risk, the diagnosis of inherited bleeding disorders or in transfusion medicine. The rationale for platelet function-driven antiplatelet therapy was based on the result of several studies on patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), where an association between high platelet reactivity despite P2Y12 inhibition and ischemic events as stent thrombosis or cardiovascular death was found. However, recent large scale randomized, controlled trials have consistently failed to demonstrate a benefit of personalised antiplatelet therapy based on platelet function testing.
Platelet Aggregation Testing on a Routine Coagulation Analyzer: A Method Comparison Study
Clinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis, 2019
Platelet function (PF) plays a pivotal role in both hemostasis and thrombosis, and manual light transmission aggregometry (LTA) is considered the standard of care for platelet function testing but is an error-prone and time-consuming procedure. We aimed to test the agreement regarding maximum aggregation (MA), velocity (VEL), and lag-phase (LagP) of platelet aggregation of the automated Sysmex CS-2100 i analyzer (Siemens, Germany) against the APACT 4004 (Elitech, France) in samples derived from healthy participants and patients with hemostaseologic disorders. In total, 123 patient-derived samples were investigated, including 42 patients with acetylsalicylic acid and/or clopidogrel intake and 20 patients with other hemostaseologic disorders. Both MA and VEL showed good or excellent intermethod correlation. Agreement between the testing methods was only partially achieved, and values were indicative for a systematic bias to lower measurements below a threshold of 50% MA with the CS-21...