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Pol. Arch. Med. Wewn. · Mar 2020
ReviewClinical significance of slightly reduced von Willebrand factor activity.
- Ksenia Bykowska and Bernadeta Ceglarek.
- Laboratory of von Willebrand Disease, Department of Hemostasis and Metabolic Disorders, Institute of Hematology and Transfusion Medicine, Warsaw, Poland. kbykowska@ihit.waw.pl
- Pol. Arch. Med. Wewn. 2020 Mar 27; 130 (3): 225-231.
AbstractVon Willebrand disease (VWD) is the most common congenital bleeding disorder, with a clinical presentation of mucocutaneous and surgical bleeding varying from mild to severe. It is inherited in an autosomal dominant or autosomal recessive manner. The disease is caused by quantitative or qualitative deficiency of the von Willebrand factor (VWF) and is classified as type 1, 2 (2A, 2B, 2M, 2N), and 3. Although type 1 VWD is the most common form of VWD, the f ormal cutoff for diagnosis remains a subject of debate. In our paper, we present results of studies regarding the clinical and laboratory importance of a new type of bleeding disorder called low VWF. The new guidelines for VWD diagnosis and management suggested that patients with historically type 1 VWD should be divided into 2 subsets: type 1 VWD with a VWF antigen level (VWF:Ag) of less than 30 IU/dl or less than 40 IU/dl, in which about 80% of patients exhibited VWF gene mutations, and low VWF with a VWF:Ag level of 30 to 50 IU/dl or 40 to 50 IU/dl, in which the causative mutation is detected in merely 40% of patients and in most families, inheritance is not dependent on the locus of VWF on chromosome 12. Previously, moderately reduced VWF levels (30-50 IU/dl) were considered a risk factor for bleeding, but not a true bleeding disorder, and this condition was named low VWF. Recently, it was documented in a large group of patients with type 1 VWD and low VWF that bleeding score does not correlate with VWF:Ag and bleeding symptoms in type 1 VWD (<30 IU/dl) and low VWF can change from infrequent and moderate to severe bleeds. Because the plasma concentration of VWF depends on many physiological and pathological factors that may mask the diagnosis of VWD, separation of the group of patients with low VWF (30-50 IU/dl) from those with type 1 VWD may delay or prevent them from receiving appropriate treatment. Diagnosis of VWD in each case, particularly those with a slight decrease in VWF (30-50 IU/dl), should be based primarily on the clinical manifestations and family history of hemorrhagic diathesis.
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