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Pathology 430/826 Bleeding Diseases David Lillicrap.

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Presentation on theme: "Pathology 430/826 Bleeding Diseases David Lillicrap."— Presentation transcript:

1 Pathology 430/826 Bleeding Diseases David Lillicrap

2 Cardiovascular Disease
30% of all deaths in Canada 54% ischemic heart disease 20% stroke 23% heart attack

3 Venous Thromboembolism
Incidence 5 cases per 100,000 person/year (<15 years old) 5 cases per 1,000 person/year (80 years old)

4 Incidence in General Population
The hemophilias are less frequent than VWD, and have X-linked inheritance Deficient Coagulation Factor Incidence in General Population Chromosome Mode of Inheritance von Willebrand Factor 1:1000 or even more 12 Autosomal dominant Factor VIII (Hemophilia A) 1:10 000 X X-linked recessive Factor IX (Hemophilia B) 1:50 000 The hemophilias are less frequent than VWD where VWD occurs ~1 in 1000 live births or even more frequently than this. In comparision, FVIII deficiency (which causes HA) occurs approximately 1 in live births, or 1 in 5000 male births. FIX deficiency (which causes HB) is more rare than FVIII deficiency, and occurs about 1 in births, or 1 in males. HA and HB are also inherited differently than VWD. VWD is autosomal dominant inheritance, whereas the hemophilias follow sex-linked inheritance, since the FVIII and FIX genes are encoded by the X chromosome.

5 Hemophilia in Canada: 2015 Hemophilia A 2,913 Hemophilia B 691
Severe 28% Moderate 10% Mild 62% Hemophilia B 691 Severe 25% Moderate 33% Mild 42%

6 1 2 3 Coagulation System

7 Extrinsic pathway Thrombin FIIa Fibrin Insoluble end product

8 1 2 3 Coagulation System

9 Amplification/Propagation
Extrinsic pathway Intrinsic pathway Amplification/Propagation Pathway +ve feedback Thrombin FIIa Fibrin Insoluble end product

10 Amplification/Propagation
Extrinsic pathway Intrinsic pathway Amplification/Propagation Pathway Tissue Factor Pathway Inhibitor +ve feedback Thrombin FIIa Fibrin Insoluble end product

11 Defective Hemostasis in Hemophilia
Extrinsic pathway Intrinsic pathway No FVIII or FIX Tissue Factor Pathway Inhibitor Common pathway Fibrin Insoluble end product Defective Hemostasis in Hemophilia

12 Procoagulant Complex Formation
FIXa FX FVIIIa cofactor Product (next enzyme) Enzyme substrate Phospholipid surface Procoagulant Complex Formation

13

14 Untreated hemarthrosis of the knee in severe hemophilia
This is an example of the type of bleeding that you can see , so here we have an untreated bleed into the knee of a patient with severe hemophilia.

15 Critical bleeding events - rare
Clinical Complications of Hemophilia Critical bleeding events - rare central nervous system Severe Hemophilia 5/1,000/yr < 5 yrs 1-2%/yr >55 yrs

16 Tsar Nicholas II and Tsarina Alexandra
Tsarevich Alexei, Grand Duchesses, Olga, Tatiana, Maria and Anastasia

17 Alexei Nikolaevich, Tsarevich of Russia
2 August 1904 – 17 July 1918

18

19 The Royal Hemophilia Mutation
Rogaev et al. Science October 2009 5’ 3’ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 CTCAAAG ATG G

20

21 Plasma Coagulation Factor Level
The circulating plasma level of FVIII or FIX is related to disease severity NORMAL plasma range: 50 – 150% Severity Plasma Coagulation Factor Level MILD hemophilia 5 - 40% MODERATE hemophilia 1 to 5% SEVERE hemophilia <1% The circulating plasma level of FVIII or FIX is releated to the severity of the disease. So the normal range for FVIII and FIX levels in between %. Once we`re under 50%, there becomes a risk for bleeding. So patients with MILD hemophilia have plasma factor levels between 6 to 40% of normal. MODERATE hemophila between 2 to 5% factor levels. SEVERE hemophilia 1% or less. And these levels will vary slightly depending on the reference youre looking at.

22 Protein Prevalence of Severe Factor Deficiency Size of Gene (kb)
Number of Exons FVIII 1 in 10,000 186 kb 26 FIX 1 in 30,000 33 kb 8 VWF 1 in 100,000 175 kb 52 FXI 1 in 1,000,000 23 kb 15 FVII 1 in 1,000,000 12 kb 9 FX 1 in 500,000 22 kb 8 FGA 8kb FGB 8 kb FGG 9 kb FGA 7 FGB 8 FGG 11 Fibrinogen 1 in 1,000,000 FV 1 in 1,000,000 80 kb 25 Subunit A 160 kb Subunit B kb Subunit A Subunit B 12 FXIII 1 in 2,000,000 Prothrombin 1 in 1,000,000 20 kb 14

23 Fibrin Clot Formation

24 Blood Flow collagen collagen collagen collagen collagen collagen

25 Blood Flow VWF VWF VWF VWF VWF collagen collagen collagen collagen

26 VWF VWF VWF VWF VWF VWF Blood Flow Platelet adhesion GpIb/VWF collagen

27 VWF VWF VWF VWF VWF VWF Blood Flow Platelet Rolling GpIb/VWF
GpVI +21/collagen Blood Flow Platelet adhesion GpIb/VWF VWF VWF VWF VWF collagen collagen VWF collagen collagen VWF

28 VWF VWF VWF VWF VWF VWF Blood Flow Stable adhesion
platelet activation aggregation GpIIb/IIIa – fibrinogen/VWF Platelet Rolling GpIb/VWF GpVI +21/collagen Blood Flow Platelet adhesion GpIb/VWF VWF VWF VWF VWF collagen collagen VWF collagen collagen VWF

29 Aland Islands from Space: 6,500 islands

30

31 5 10 28 45 52 VWF Gene: Chromosome 12p 178 kbp

32 von Willebrand Factor Structure
CK D1 D2 D’D3 D4 C1 C2 C3 C4 C5 C6 VWFpp 740 AA VWF mature subunit 2050 AA D Assembly Composition VWD-C8-TIL-E von Willebrand Factor Structure Y-F Zhou et al. Blood 2012

33 The Mature VWF Subunit with Associated Ligands
FVIII P-selectin VWFpp β2 integrins αIIbβ3 αvβ3 ADAMTS13 A1 A2 A3 CK D’D3 D4 C1 C2 C3 C4 C5 C6 GPIbα Collagen VI OPG PSGL-1 β2GPI Ang2 Collagen I Collagen III TSP1 The Mature VWF Subunit with Associated Ligands

34 adhesion/aggregation
Atherothrombosis Platelet adhesion/aggregation Venous thrombosis VWF Functions Inflammation Cell proliferation/ apoptosis Angiogenesis Lenting et al. JTH 2012

35 Diagnosis of von Willebrand Disease
1. Personal history of excessive mucocutaneous bleeding. Laboratory results consistent with deficiency of normally functional VWF or presence of a dysfunctional VWF protein. 3. Family history of von Willebrand disease.

36 Standardized measurement of VWF:Ag VWF:RCo
The Diagnosis of von Willebrand Disease Standardized measurement of VWF:Ag VWF:RCo

37 Von Willebrand Disease Classification
(ISTH 2006) Qualitative Variants 20% Type 1 Type 2 Type3 80% 1 per million Quantitative Variants

38 ISTH 2006 VWD Classification
Type qualitative traits 2A 2B 2M 2N ~20%

39 Endothelial Cell Storage and release from Weibel-Palade Bodies
VWF clearance a) Differential glycan additions b) VWF misfolding Golgi Apparatus Multimer formation Propeptide cleavage Glycan modification Constitutive secretion Endoplasmic reticulum Dimer formation initial glycan additions Receptor-mediated clearance in liver & spleen a) Macrophages b) Sinusoidal endothelium VWF mRNA Processing Gene expression Endothelial Cell Sites of Potential Pathogenic Changes Resulting in Quantitative VWF Traits


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