Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Basic coagulation techniques and Quality control issues

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Basic coagulation techniques and Quality control issues"— Presentation transcript:

1 Basic coagulation techniques and Quality control issues
Dr. Shrimati Shetty Deputy Director National Institute of Immunohematology ( ICMR) KEM Hospital, Mumbai

2 Final Diagnosis of a bleeding disorder

3 Anticoagulant 0.129 M tri sodium Citrate at a ratio of 9 parts blood to 1 part anticoagulant is used for all coagulation tests. Why not EDTA or Heparin? EDTA irreversibly chelates Ca ions Heparin activates antithrombin which is an inhibitor of coagulation

4 Anticoagulant… If the HCT is above 55%
Anticoagulant vol. [x] = 100 – hematocrit x total vol. of anticoagulated blood required Example: Patient hematocrit = 60% x 5.0 = 0.37 mL

5 Preanalytical variables
Sample hemolysis/ lipaemic sample Improper proportion of Anticoagulant to blood Prolonged time interval before testing Difficult punctures Freeze thawing the samples

6 Coagulation Tests Screening coagulation tests Confirmatory Tests

7 When a bleeding patient walks in, what should be the initial tests to be performed?
Screening tests Peripheral smear ( Bernards Soulier syndrome, macrothrombocytopenia, leukemia , thrombocytopenia ) Complete Blood Count ( BSS, MTCP, Leukemias, thrombocytopenia) PT APTT TT FXIII screening

8

9 Only PT is abnormal Congenital Causes Factor VII deficiency
Acquired Causes Liver disease Warfarin DIC Inhibitors LA Malignancy

10 PT - INR PT measures the deficiency of all VK dependent coagulation factors and also the integrity of extrinsic pathway INR = [Patient PT]ISI [Control PT]

11 Only APTT is abnormal Congenital Causes
Factor VIII/ IX/XI/XII contact factors Acquired Causes Liver disease Warfarin DIC Heparin Inhibitors to factors, LA

12 PT & APTT prolonged Congenital causes
i.Combined deficiency of V & VIII ii. Factor X deficiency iii. Factor V deficiency iv. Multiple VK dependent clotting factor deficiency Acquired causes Liver disease Warfarin DIC Heparin Inhibitors to factors vitamin K deficiency

13 PT, APTT, TT prolonged Congenital causes
i. Afibrinogenemia/ dysfibrinogenemia ii. Factor II deficiency Acquired causes DIC Liver disease

14 Screening for F XIII deficiency
Clot solubility test Clot formation with either thrombin or CaCl2 Solubility of the clot using 2% acetic acid , 1% mono chloroacetic acid or urea After 24 hours , the clot is observed for solubility Different sensitivities with different clotting reagents & solvents Severe factor deficiency sometimes gets misdiagnosed as F XIII deficiency ELISA test is the sensitive assay for detecting F XIII deficiency

15 Confirmatory tests-Factor Assays
Reagents required Normal pooled plasma or unicalibrator Factor Deficient plasma APTT reagent CaCl2

16 Factor assays…. Factor VIII/IX/XI/XII – APTT based
Factor II/VII – PT mode Factor V/X – can be both PT/APTT mode

17 Factor VIII Graph

18 Interpretation of factor results
At birth, activities of the vitamin K dependent factors II, VII, IX, and X and the concentrations of the contact factors XI and XII are reduced to about 50% of normal adult values. The levels of the factors V, VIII, XIII, and fibrinogen are similar to adult values Plasma concentrations of the naturally occurring anticoagulant proteins (antithrombin, protein C, and protein S) are significantly lower at birth than during the adult years Most blood coagulation factors and fibrinogen increase during pregnancy. Factor (F) XI is the only blood coagulation factor that decreases. Malignancies

19 Interpretation Should we go ahead with factor assays even when screening tests are normal? yes, in case of any clinical indication we should do the specific factors even if PT/APTT is normal

20 NPP 20-25 healthy donors , blood group matched
Compare it with unicalibrator with known factor values Never use a single individual sample as control

21 Deficient Plasma& APTT reagents
Should have 0% FVIII Negative for TTD/inhibitors Different APTT reagents have different sensitivities

22 Factor Assays Severe <1% factor Moderate 1-5% Mild 6-40%
About 5% of the patients are clinically mild despite having <1% factor

23 Can we diagnose a patient as HA or HB without doing factor assays?
Mixing Studies BaSO4 adsorbed normal plasma, deficient in factors VII, IX, X and prothrombin Aged normal serum, deficient in factors V and VIII, prothrombin, and fibrinogen

24 Mixing Studies…. Result Interpretation NPP+Adsorbed Plasma Correction
F VIII deficiency NPP+ Aged Serum No Correction No Correction F IX deficiency

25 Mixing Studies….. Mixture Result Interpretation
NPP + F VIII Def Plasma Correction F IX deficiency NPP + F IX Def Plasma F VIII deficiency

26 Platelet Aggregation tests
Highly variable results Diet, Medication, physical activity Platelet receptor studies to confirm diagnosis Always confirm diagnosis by other tests Never give a diagnosis based on platelet aggregation alone!

27 Disorders diagnosed by platelet aggregation and receptor studies
Von Willebrand disease Glanzmanns thrombasthenia Bernard Soulier syndrome Storage pool defect Cyclooxygenase deficiency others

28

29 What are the other supporting tests?
Platelet receptor studies using antibodies specific for platelet receptors GP 1b/IX for diagnosis of BSS (CD 42) GP IIb/IIIa for diagnosis of GT( CD41, CD61) collagen receptors ( CD36)

30 Diagnosis of VWD Platelet aggregation with Ristocetin ( 1.25 mg/ml) absent or reduced Type IIb shows increased aggregation with 0.5 mg/ml whereas in normal cases there is no aggregation VWF by Electrophoresis sensitive only for severe def ELISA is the test of conirmation RCof , collagen binding ELISA and Multimer analysis to subtype

31 Diagnosis of BSS Giant platelets in peripheral smear
Normal or reduced platelet count Absence of aggregation with 1.25 mg/ml risticetin Absence of GP 1b/IX receptors by flow cytometry

32 Diagnosis of GT Absence of aggregation with 6uM ADP, 4ug/mL collagen and 0.75mM arachdonic acid Absence of GP IIb/IIIa receptors by flow cytometry

33 Storage pool defect Primary phase aggregation with all agonists

34 Screening for inhibitors ( Mixing studies)
NPP and patient plasma mixed and APTT performed at 0 hour, 1 hour and 2 hour Should exclude Lupus anticoagulants FVIII inhibitors are generally progressive , FIX inhibitors/LA immediate acting

35 Screening for inhibitors
0 hr 1 hr 2 hrs NPP Patient Separately incubated Incubated Mix

36 The Bethesda Assay 36

37 Specialized Investigations
Thromboelastography

38 Thromboelastography

39 Thrombinoscope

40 Thrombinoscope

41 PFA 100

42 Quality control exercises
IQC EQC

43 Some examples Case 1 Peripheral smear- giant platelets seen
Platelet count 130X103/uL PT – C14 Secs/ P 15 secs ; APTT – C29 secs/P 32 secs; TT – C 16 secs/P 15 secs F XIII - N RIPA – Ristocetin 5% ADP, collagen, AA % GP1b/IX receptors – highly reduced Diagnosis : BSS

44 Some examples ….. Case 2 PS – normal Platelets 260X 103/ul
PT C14 secs/ P 32 secs APTT C 30 secs P 58 secs TT C 15 secs/ P 16 secs F XIII - N FX 96%; F V 15% F VIII 8% Diagnosis: Combined deficiency of F V and VIII

45 Thank you


Download ppt "Basic coagulation techniques and Quality control issues"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google