Original Article
Cirrhosis patients have a coagulopathy that is associated with decreased clot formation capacity

https://doi.org/10.1111/jth.12706Get rights and content
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Summary

Background

The coagulopathy in cirrhosis is associated with thrombosis and bleeding.

Objectives

To gain better insights into the coagulopathy in patients with cirrhosis, we evaluated plasma thrombin generation and whole blood clot formation in a cross‐sectional study.

Methods

Blood was collected from 73 patients with all‐cause cirrhosis (Child‐Pugh‐A n = 52, B n = 15, C n = 6) and 20 healthy controls. Activity of the coagulation pathways was measured with assays for factor (F) VIIa and FIXa‐antithrombin and FXa‐antithrombin complexes, respectively. Thrombin generation by calibrated automated thrombography was determined in platelet‐poor plasma using a 1 or 5 pm tissue factor trigger with/without thrombomodulin. ROTEM measurements were performed in whole blood triggered with 35 pm tissue factor without/with 175 ng mL−1 tissue plasminogen activator (the latter refered to as ‘tPA‐ROTEM’).

Results

We observed an increased generation of FVIIa and a moderately elevated amount of FIXa (in complex with antithrombin) without apparent increase in FX activation in patients with cirrhosis. In accordance with this prothrombotic state, markers of thrombin generation potential were also increased upon increasing severity of cirrhosis. In the whole blood clotting assay we observed delayed clot formation and decreased clot strength associated with increased severity of cirrhosis. No significant differences were found for tPA‐ROTEM parameters of clot degradation.

Conclusion

These results indicate that cirrhosis patients have an overall procoagulant plasma milieu but a decreased whole blood clot formation capacity with an apparently unaltered resistance to clot lysis.

Keywords

cirrhosis
hemostasis
hypercoagulability
thrombin
thromboelastometry

Cited by (0)

Manuscript handled by: P. de Moerloose

Final decision: P. de Moerloose, 24 July 2014