Residual Plasmatic Activity of ADAMTS13 in Congenital Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura Correlates with Disease Phenotype
Article 2011 en
Authors
LL
Luca A. Lotta
HW
Haifeng Wu
MS
Marie Scully
Abstract
1 min read
Abstract Abstract 2219 ABSTRACT Congenital thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) (OMIM #274150) is a rare, recessively inherited thrombotic microangiopathy characterized by the congenital deficiency of ADAMTS13 due to mutations in the corresponding gene. The clinical phenotype of congenital TTP is variable, encompassing neonatal-onset disease and adult-onset disease, forms with a single disease episode and chronic-relapsing forms. A review of the ∼100 published cases of congenital TTP showed similar age of first disease episode in patients carrying the same ADAMTS13 gene suggesting that different ADAMTS13 mutations might influence the severity of clinical phenotype, conceivably by determining different patterns of residual plasmatic activity of ADAMTS13. However, the quantification of residual ADAMTS13 activity in severely deficient patients was blunted by the relatively high limit of detection (LOD) of commonly used ADAMTS13 activity assays (varying between 3% and 6%). We report 29 cases of congenital TTP from 4 European cohorts, with 32 mutations of ADAMTS13 including 8 not previously published. To assess if residual ADAMTS13 activity was detectable in these patients and correlated with their clinical history, ADAMTS13 activity was measured by SELDI-TOF mass spectrometry (LOD=0.5%). ADAMTS13 activity above 0.5% was measurable in 26 (90%) patients, and lower levels of activity correlated with an earlier age of disease onset (r=0.51; p=0.006) and with the need for regular fresh frozen plasma prophylaxis (2.24% vs 3.88%; p=0.03). Mutations at the highly conserved N-terminal domains of the protein were associated with lower residual ADAMTS13 activity (1.48% vs 4.89%, p=0.02) and earlier disease onset (3.2 years vs 24.2 years, p=0.003). Our results show that residual ADAMTS13 activity correlates with the severity of clinical phenotype in congenital TTP and provide insights into genotype-phenotype correlations. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
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