• Thromb Haemostasis · May 2010

    Age is a determinant factor for measures of concentration and effect in children requiring unfractionated heparin.

    • Fiona Newall, Vera Ignjatovic, Linda Johnston, Robyn Summerhayes, Geoff Lane, Noel Cranswick, and Paul Monagle.
    • Department of Paediatrics, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia. fiona.newall@rch.org.au
    • Thromb Haemostasis. 2010 May 1;103(5):1085-90.

    AbstractPrevious studies investigating continuous unfractionated heparin (UFH) therapy report age-related differences in UFH response in children, as measured by APTT and anti-Xa assay. This study determined the age-related response following administration of a single UFH bolus of 75-100 IU/kg in children. Venous blood samples were collected from children (n=56) at 15, 30, 45 and 120 minutes post-UFH. Anti-Xa, anti-IIa, APTT, TCT and protamine titration were performed on all samples. Age-dependent differences in the effect and concentration of UFH were identified for the anti-Xa, anti-IIa and protamine titration assays, respectively. In addition, a trend suggesting a proportional increase in anti-Xa and anti-IIa-mediated UFH effect with age was evident. Logistic regression demonstrated an increase in protamine titration of 0.6 IU/ml for every year of age in samples collected 15 minutes post-UFH. UFH-mediated anti-IIa activity was reduced compared to anti-Xa activity across childhood, with a two-fold increase in anti-Xa to anti-IIa ratio in infants less than one year of age compared to teenagers in the setting of high UFH concentrations. This study demonstrates that the previously reported age-dependent response to UFH occurs in the context of an age-dependent serum concentration of UFH. The trend toward increased UFH serum concentration and anticoagulant activity with age may be related to short-term differences in UFH binding to coagulant and competitive plasma proteins in vivo.

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