Pregnancy in patients with primary thrombocythemia (PT) is reported to be often complicated by recurrent abortion and fetal growth retardation. Fifteen pregnancies in nine patients with PT are reported. Nine pregnancies had a good outcome, with the birth of a healthy infant. There were two spontaneous abortions and three intrauterine deaths. One pregnancy was electively terminated after extensive thrombosis in the splanchnic district requiring surgical entero-resection. In five pregnancies the mother received no treatment; in ten pregnancies acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) was prescribed to the mother as soon as she was found pregnant, subcutaneous heparin was added from the middle trimester in seven cases. In patients treated with ASA and subcutaneous heparin pregnancies had a good outcome. Administration of ASA and heparin during pregnancy appears to improve the outcome in patients with PT and can prevent severe maternal complications, but requires close monitoring.
Deficiency of the anticoagulant vitamin K-dependent protein S (PS) is associated with increased risk of venous thrombosis. In human plasma, PS circulates in two forms: as free protein (free PS) and PS bound to C4b-binding protein (C4BP), a regulator of the complement system. Assays for free PS have higher sensitivity and specificity for protein S deficiency than assays for total protein S. We have extensively evaluated the analytical performance of a novel assay for free PS, the IL Test Free Protein S, which takes advantage of the affinity of C4BP for free PS, and compared its performance to existing methods. IL Test Free Protein S is a rapid, fully automated turbidimetric assay consisting of two reagents: a C4BP coated latex and an anti-PS monoclonal antibody coated latex. The test range, precision and linearity were adequate and the assay tolerated high concentrations of interfering substances of clinical significance. The reference range agreed with previously published studies. The analysis of 903 patient samples belonging to 20 different clinical categories with the new assay yielded free PS results that agreed well with those obtained using the assays established in the participating laboratories. The study demonstrated the IL Test Free Protein S to be rapid, reliable and easy to perform.
It has been shown that fludarabine (FLU) is superior to conventional treatment in B-CLL for rate and quality of response, leading to CR even at the molecular level. In this paper we report our preliminary results with this drug in B-CLL patients.Twenty-seven B-CLL patients (16 refractory to previous therapy, 7 responsive and treated for subsequent disease reexpansion, 4 untreated with active disease) were administered FLU at a dose of 25 mg/sqm for 5 days every 4 weeks.Twenty-five patients were evaluable and 14 of them (56%) were responsive. All four untreated patients responded: 1 CR (PCR analysis showed the persistence of clonal VDJ rearrangement) and 3 PR, while 67% of the previously responsive group again showed a reaction: 2 PR (33%) and 2 nodular PR (33%). Among the refractory patients we recorded 6 responses (39%): 1 CR (6%) and 5 PR (33%). Besides 2 cases of lethal myelotoxicity, we observed 2 cases of encephalopathy and 2 cases of heart failure. Four deaths may have been related to FLU therapy (15%).We confirm the effectiveness of FLU and the improved outcome, in terms of toxicity and response rate, it provides in untreated B-CLL patients. Further studies are needed to explore the possible negative effects of FLU on neuronal and heart function, and the impact of this drug on survival in selected groups of patients.
We evaluated a new test, based on prothrombin activation by Echis Carinatus snake venom in the absence/presence of unfractionated heparin, in patients with venous thromboembolism (VTE).The test (activated prothrombin heparin-inhibition test) was performed in 555 unselected, unrelated patients who had suffered from at least one objectively confirmed VTE and the results were compared with those obtained in 408 healthy controls.In 71 (12.8%) of the 555 patients the results of the test, expressed as a normalized ratio, were below the cut-off. This compared with 19 (5% by definition) results below the cut-off in the control group. The crude OR for VTE in subjects with altered vs those with normal results was 3.00 (95% CI: 1.78-5.07). ORs did not significantly change after adjustment for age (2.86, 95% CI: 1.68-4.85) and age/sex (2.80, 95% CI: 1.64-4.77) by logistic regression. After adjustment for antithrombin III, fibrinogen and prothrombin levels the risk associated with altered results remained significantly high. The overall OR for VTE in females (3.22; 95% CI: 1.53-6.75) was higher than that in males (2.69; 95% CI: 1.27-5.69). However, for both sexes there was a sharp increase in the risk of VTE associated with altered results in patients aged less than 45 years (crude OR 9.61; 95% CI: 3.38-27.3).Lower than expected thrombin inhibition by endogenous antithrombin action after full activation by heparin addition was found to be a common feature in patients who suffered from previous venous thrombotic events, and may reflect a hitherto unrecognized thrombophilic alteration.
BACKGROUND Cell transplantation has come of age but numerous questions still remain. Which type of cell should be used? Cardiac precursors are present in mouse bone marrow and used to repair the infarcted myocardium in mice. We searched for these precursors in human bone marrow and analyzed gene expression patterns in cells induced to differentiate in vitro. METHODS Cells from human bone marrow were isolated and cultured in medium supplemented with autologous serum and 5% CO2. Cell characterization was performed by immunocytochemical analysis. mRNA was isolated and retrotranscribed. The active genes were detected with polymerase chain reaction by using specific oligonucleotides. RESULTS Some inducers pushed the cell through different stages of cardiogenesis, with expression of cardiac transcriptional activators and structural proteins. Some combinations of stimuli were able to drive cells to advanced stages of cardiogenesis. CONCLUSIONS These studies lead to an exact description of in vitro cardiogenesis in humans. Our aim was also to assess the residual proliferative capacity of cells and to enhance the differentiation efficiency, thus maximizing their repair capacity and the likelihood that they functionally integrate with the surrounding cardiac tissue.
B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) results from the accumulation of monoclonal CD5+ B cells. Despite its homogeneity at cellular level, B-CLL is clinically heterogeneous. Clinical studies indicate that CD38+ B-CLL are characterized by a more aggressive clinical course than are CD38- B-CLL. On the basis of these studies and considering the established correlation between specific chromosome aberrations and the clinical course of B-CLL, it is possible that CD38+ B-CLL cases are also characterized by specific subsets of chromosomal alterations.Comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) was performed on purified B-cells from peripheral blood of 52 patients with B-CLL in order to detect chromosome imbalance. The immunophenotype of the patients, including CD38 expression, was also determined by flow cytometry. The results of CGH experiments were then compared with CD38 expression.We found a clear correlation between the presence of chromosomal imbalances and CD38 expression: 13/16 CD38+ cases had chromosome imbalances, most of them (12/13) correlated with a poor prognosis. Among the CD38- B-CLL patients, only 8/36 displayed chromosome imbalances; the only three cases with loss in 13q as a single aberration, considered a good prognostic marker, were in this group. Moreover, we found that cytogenetic alterations were also more complex in the CD38+ B-CLL subset, since 9/10 with two or more aberrations were in the CD38+ group.Collectively, the data reinforce the value of CD38 as a prognostic factor and indicate that genotypic/phenotypic features distinguish B-CLL subsets.