Definition
Autoimmune hypercoagulable state resulting from antibody recognition of cell membrane components including cardiolipin and β2-glycoprotein. Commonly seen in lupus, patients with APLS will often have a history of miscarriage and/or unexplained thrombosis.
Evaluation
In order to make the definitive diagnosis of APLS, the patient must meet at least one clinical criteria and at least one laboratory criteria.
Clinical criteria
- Vascular thrombosis: arterial, venous, or small-vessel thrombus in any organ.
- Complication of pregnancy: >1 unexplained fetus death(s) after 10 weeks with a morphologically normal fetus, >1 premature birth(s) before 34 weeks with a morphologically normal fetus, or >3 unexplained consecutive spontaneous abortions before 10 weeks of gestation.
Laboratory criteria (modified Sapporo criteria)
- Anticardiolipin IgM or IgG antibodies (moderately or highly positive on two or more occasions, at least 12 weeks apart).
- Anti-beta2-glycoprotein IgM or IgG antibodies (moderately or highly positive on two or more occasions, at least 12 weeks apart).
- Lupus anticoagulant antibodies (positive on two or more occasions, at least 12 weeks apart).
- NOTE: antiphospholipid antibodies may be transiently positive during acute thrombosis. Initial testing best delayed for a few weeks after initial episode of thrombosis.
- Making the laboratory diagnosis of lupus anticoagulant: while the cornerstone of laboratory diagnosis is antibody testing, the expense of antibody testing has led to guidelines that recommend assessing lupus anticoagulant activity before proceeding to antibody tests.
- Step 1: is the PTT elevated?
- If yes, proceed directly to mixing study (step 2).
- If no, check dilute Russell viper venom time (RVVT). RVVT is more specific to the part of the coagulation cascade that requires phospholipids, and thus a more sensitive test for APLS.
- If the RVVT is normal, STOP. The patient most likely does not have APLS.
- If the RVVT is prolonged (abnormal), proceed to the mixing study (step 2).
- Step 2: does a mixing study correct the prolonged PTT (or RVVT)?
- If yes, the problem is most likely a factor deficiency. Run an “incubated” mixing study. If the PTT remains corrected, the problem is a factor deficiency. If the PTT (or RVVT) begins to prolong again, proceed to step 3.
- If no, the problem is either APLS or a factor inhibitor. Proceed to step 3.
- Step 3: does the PTT (or RVVT) correct with addition of excess phospholipids?
- If yes, you have your diagnosis: antiphospholipid syndrome.
- At USCF we also send a lupus hexa test that uses hexagonal phospholipid which is more potent at reversing inhibition by an anti-phospholipid antibody. About 1/2 of patients with APLS will be positive for both dRVVT and Hexa, 1/4 positive for dRVVT alone, and 1/4 positive for Hexa based on UCSF experience.
- Step 1: is the PTT elevated?
Management
- Patients with APLS usually require indefinite therapeutic anticoagulation with warfarin to achieve an INR of 2-3 unless strong contraindications exist. DOACs are not currently recommended.
- When PTT is prolonged by APLS, monitor degree of anticoagulation with anti-Xa level when bridging to warfarin with heparin.
- If PT is also elevated at baseline, consider presence of an anti-prothrombin antibody which may increase risk of bleeding. In this case, anticoagulation (even with warfarin) needs to be monitored with a chromogenic factor-Xa assay.
Key Points
- In rare cases, APLS can lead to multi-organ dysfunction through the accumulation of clots in a multiple locations; this is referred to catastrophic APLS, and has a very poor prognosis.
- PTT is prolonged by APLS, often resulting in a need to monitor degree of anticoagulation with anti-Xa level when bridging to warfarin with heparin – sometimes anti-Xa is monitored even with a normal PTT – consult with Hematology.
Crowther MA, Ginsberg JS, Julian J et al, A comparison of two intensities of warfarin for the prevention of recurrent thrombosis in patients with the antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. N Engl J Med 2003; 349(12):1133-8.
Levine JS, Branch DW, Rauch J. The antiphospholipid syndrome. N Engl J Med 2002;346:752-763.
Miyakis S, Lockshin MD, Atsumi T, et al. International consensus statement on an update of the classification criteria for definite antiphospholipid syndrome (APS). J Thromb Haemost. 2006;4:295–306.
Pengo V, Tripodi A, Reber G et al. Update of the guidelines for lupus anticoagulant detection. J Thromb Haemost. 2009 7:1737-40.
Win K, Rodgers GM. New oral anticoagulants may not be effective to prevent venous thromboembolism in patients with antiphospholipid syndrome. Am J Hematol. 2014 Oct;89(10):1017.