Surgery-Associated Factor VIII Inhibitors in Patients without Hemophilia

1999 
The acquisition of antibodies to factor VIII (ie, factor VIII protein) by patients without hemophilia is associated with conditions such as pregnancy, lymphoma, and autoimmune disorders. We present three patients who acquired factor VIII antibodies in the postoperative setting. Preoperatively, none gave a history of bleeding even with past surgeries and all had normal coagulation tests. Within days of surgery (bowel resection, cholecystectomy, coronary bypass), a bleeding diathesis emerged with prolonged partial thromboplastin time, decreased factor VIII levels, and demonstrable factor VIII antibodies. All patients required multiple blood transfusions and urgent re-exploration for hemostatic control. All were treated with high dose human factor VIII infusions, corticosteroids, and various forms of immunosuppression. We wish to raise awareness of surgery as a precipitating cause of acquired hemophilia, which is something to be considered with unusual postoperative bleeding. This syndrome is remarkable for its abrupt onset within days of surgery, dramatic bleeding, subsequent persistence, but potential reversal by immunosuppression.
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