The development of targeted therapy drugs acting on tumor growth and progression is greatly expanding these last years. Among them kinase inhibitors have a prominent position and have demonstrated efficacy and clinical benefits in solid and hematologic malignancies. Compared to conventional systemic cytotoxic chemotherapeutic agents, their specific mechanism of action limits the occurrence of adverse events. However, as targeted kinases are shared by normal cells, their inhibition can affect physiological cell function. In this review we will focus on the side effects of kinase inhibitors on blood platelets which actively use kinase-related signalling pathways to prevent haemorrhages following vessel injury. Major functions of platelets are to adhere to the subendothelial matrix and to aggregate to form a haemostatic plug preventing excessive blood loss upon vascular lesion. Several kinase inhibitors including dasatinib and ibrutinib have been reported to affect specific steps of platelet activation process and to increase bleeding risk. This has important clinical implications particularly in patients treated with antithrombotic drugs. We will describe the effect of kinase inhibitors known to affect platelet activation and discuss the potential impact of those under development that may also interfere with platelet functions. Keywords: Targeted drugs, anticancer therapies, kinase inhibitors, platelet functions, haemostasis-related adverse events.
Postprocedural aortic regurgitation occurs in 10 to 20% of patients undergoing transcatheter aortic-valve replacement (TAVR) for aortic stenosis. We hypothesized that assessment of defects in high-molecular-weight (HMW) multimers of von Willebrand factor or point-of-care assessment of hemostasis could be used to monitor aortic regurgitation during TAVR.We enrolled 183 patients undergoing TAVR. Patients with aortic regurgitation after the initial implantation, as identified by means of transesophageal echocardiography, underwent additional balloon dilation to correct aortic regurgitation. HMW multimers and the closure time with adenosine diphosphate (CT-ADP), a point-of-care measure of hemostasis, were assessed at baseline and 5 minutes after each step of the procedure. Mortality was evaluated at 1 year. A second cohort (201 patients) was studied to validate the use of CT-ADP in order to identify patients with aortic regurgitation.After the initial implantation, HMW multimers normalized in patients without aortic regurgitation (137 patients). Among the 46 patients with aortic regurgitation, normalization occurred in 20 patients in whom additional balloon dilation was successful but did not occur in the 26 patients with persistent aortic regurgitation. A similar sequence of changes was observed with CT-ADP. A CT-ADP value of more than 180 seconds had sensitivity, specificity, and negative predictive value of 92.3%, 92.4%, and 98.6%, respectively, for aortic regurgitation, with similar results in the validation cohort. Multivariable analyses showed that the values for HMW multimers and CT-ADP at the end of TAVR were each associated with mortality at 1 year.The presence of HMW-multimer defects and a high value for a point-of-care hemostatic test, the CT-ADP, were each predictive of the presence of aortic regurgitation after TAVR and were associated with higher mortality 1 year after the procedure. (Funded by Lille 2 University and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02628509.).
The 27th Congress of the International Society of Thrombosis and Haemostasis (ISTH) is an international conference held July 6‐10, 2019, in Melbourne, the capital of the state of Victoria, Australia. The ISTH congress has previously been held every other year, with the Scientific and Standardization Committee (SSC) meeting held annually, until 2019 when it became one combined annual meeting of the ISTH and SSC. The conference covers clinical and basic aspects of hemostasis and thrombosis, and this year includes 5 Plenary lectures and >50 State of Art (SOA) lectures, presented by internationally recognized speakers, as well as numerous oral session and poster presentations selected from submitted abstracts, including many early career and reach the world support recipients. This SOA review article in RPTH contains concise Illustrated Review Articles or 'Capsules' consisting of short text, three references and a figure, with topics including stroke, cancer‐associated thrombosis, hemophilia, coagulation, the interface between infection and inflammation, and in the experimental and discovery areas, megakaryocyte biology and platelet production, structure‐function of key receptors and coagulation factors, and emerging new roles for thrombotic/hemostatic factors. Together, these articles highlight novel findings which will advance knowledge and with the potential to change clinical practice and improve outcomes. It is hoped that conference attendees and followers will enjoy utilizing the images for ongoing education and during the conference for live tweeting during sessions, to assist in the broadcasting and promotion of the science to those unable to attend, or who have chosen to attend a concurrent session. Use #IllustratedReview and #ISTH2019 on social media.
Transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) is an established treatment option for symptomatic patients with severe aortic valve stenosis (AS). During and early after the procedure, both ischemic events (predominantly stroke) and bleedings remain prevalent. The optimal antithrombotic regimen is still debated. Single- versus dual-antiplatelet therapy is associated with a lower rate of severe bleeding, without difference in thrombotic complications. Although platelets have been empirically targeted, little is known on their contribution to these events primarily related to embolization of thrombotic material and tissue-derived debris from the wounded aortic valve and large vessels. The objective of this study was to assess local platelet activation in blood sampled in the ascending aorta immediately before and within minutes postimplantation. A series of 18 patients with AS on monotherapy with aspirin successfully underwent TAVI with the self-expandable Medtronic CoreValve by transfemoral route. No clinical thrombotic complication occurred at 30-day follow-up. Compared with patients with stable coronary artery disease unscathed of AS and similarly treated by low-dose aspirin, AS patients displayed a chronic state of platelet activation before TAVI, assessed in venous blood using various biomarkers. However, per procedure, in aortic blood, no change occurred between the two time points in the plasma levels of serotonin or 12-lipoxgenase products, or membrane exposure of granule markers CD62-P and CD63. Our results suggest that local acute platelet activation is limited during TAVI on monotherapy with aspirin.