Abstract
HIT is usually caused by platelet-activating antibodies of IgG class that bind to neoepitopes on platelet factor 4 (PF4) bound to heparin or certain other polyanions. Commercial enzyme-immunoassays (EIAs), however, measure PF4/polyanion-reactive antibodies of IgA and IgM class, in addition to IgG class antibodies. This raises the question: Does the detection of these IgA and IgM class antibodies improve HIT assay operating characteristics (perhaps because IgA and IgM are a marker for pathogenic HIT-IgG and/or for clinical HIT) or worsen operating characteristics (perhaps via detection of numerous non-HIT sera containing non-pathogenic IgA and/or IgM class antibodies)? We performed systematic serologic studies of 362 stored sera from a clinical trial of heparin therapy (
Table 1. Serologic features of 12 patients with clinical HIT.
. | Serotonin Release . | In-house EIA-IgG . | Commercial EIA . |
---|---|---|---|
IQR=interquartile (25%, 75%) range; data are percent serotonin release using washed platelets and absorbance units (OD405) using EIA-G and EIA-GTI. | |||
Sensitivity (true-POS) | 12/12 (100%) | 12/12 (100%) | 12/12 (100%) |
Median (IQR) POS result | 98.5% (90.0, 99.5) | 1.669 (1.223, 2.056) | 1.802 (1.355, 2.344) |
Specificity (true-NEG) | 338/350 (96.6%) | 322/350 (92.0%) | 281/350 (80.3%) |
. | Serotonin Release . | In-house EIA-IgG . | Commercial EIA . |
---|---|---|---|
IQR=interquartile (25%, 75%) range; data are percent serotonin release using washed platelets and absorbance units (OD405) using EIA-G and EIA-GTI. | |||
Sensitivity (true-POS) | 12/12 (100%) | 12/12 (100%) | 12/12 (100%) |
Median (IQR) POS result | 98.5% (90.0, 99.5) | 1.669 (1.223, 2.056) | 1.802 (1.355, 2.344) |
Specificity (true-NEG) | 338/350 (96.6%) | 322/350 (92.0%) | 281/350 (80.3%) |
In contrast, the EIA-A and EIA-M assays were positive in less than half of the HIT patients. Further, the magnitude of the IgA and IgM anti-PF4/heparin immune response did not differ between the 12 HIT patients, and the 69 non-HIT patients who had any PF4/polyanion immune response, as defined by a positive EIA-GTI without HIT (Table 2).
Table 2. Comparison of the HIT and non-HIT Immune Response for IgA and IgM.
. | IgA Positive . | IgA: Median (IQR) . | IgM Positive . | IgM: Median (IQR) . |
---|---|---|---|---|
* Non-HIT immune response defined as positive EIA-GTI but no clinical HIT. | ||||
HIT (n=12) | 5/12 (41.7%) | 0.400 (0.210, 1.421) | 3/12 (25.0%) | 0.340 (0.269, 0.522) |
Non-HIT immune response (n=69)* | 25/69 (36.2%) | 0.316 (0.208, 0.870) | 18/69 (26.1%) | 0.322 (0.193, 0.475) |
P value | 0.75 | 0.58 | 1.00 | 0.25 |
. | IgA Positive . | IgA: Median (IQR) . | IgM Positive . | IgM: Median (IQR) . |
---|---|---|---|---|
* Non-HIT immune response defined as positive EIA-GTI but no clinical HIT. | ||||
HIT (n=12) | 5/12 (41.7%) | 0.400 (0.210, 1.421) | 3/12 (25.0%) | 0.340 (0.269, 0.522) |
Non-HIT immune response (n=69)* | 25/69 (36.2%) | 0.316 (0.208, 0.870) | 18/69 (26.1%) | 0.322 (0.193, 0.475) |
P value | 0.75 | 0.58 | 1.00 | 0.25 |
Similar observations were made when we compared the 24 SRA-positive patients (including the 12 HIT patients) against the 57 SRA-negative, EIA-GTI positive patients. CONCLUSION: Detection of PF4/polyanion-reactive IgA and IgM class antibodies worsens the operating characteristics of HIT assays through the detection of numerous non-pathogenic antibodies, without any offsetting advantages in the detection of pathogenic HIT antibodies. Optimal diagnostic laboratory testing for HIT antibodies should include a platelet activation assay and an EIA that detects only IgG class antibodies reactive against PF4/heparin (or PF4/polyanion).
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