Von Willebrand disease: Difference between revisions

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**Consider in type 3 VWD patients who have developed antibodies to VWF replacement
**Consider in type 3 VWD patients who have developed antibodies to VWF replacement
**Increased risk of thrombosis, especially in patients with coronary artery disease
**Increased risk of thrombosis, especially in patients with coronary artery disease
{| {{table}}
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Types of Von Willebrand Disease'''
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Pathophysiology'''
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Therapy'''
| align="center" style="background:#f0f0f0;"|'''Procedures'''
|-
| Type 1 ||Low levels of all proteins ||Desmopressin ||rowspan="8"|Desmopressin Responsive: <br>Infuse 0.3 ug/kg to end 45 minutes before procedure. May repeat every 24 hours.
<br>For major procedures follow factor VIII levels with plan to keep troughs over 80% <br>Not desmopressin responsive:<br>Humate-P to achieve peak over 120% and troughs of 80%.  Levels below 30%: 40-50 IU/kg followed by 20 IU/kg every 12 hours<br>Levels above 30%: 20-40 IU/kg every day <br>
|-
| Type 2 ||Abnormal protein ||
|-
| Type 2A ||Abnormal protein leading to lower levels of high weight multimers ||Desmopressin (only effective in 10%), Humate-P
|-
| Type 2B ||Abnormal protein with increased binding to gpIIb leading to lower levels of high weight multimers ||Humate-P
|-
| Type 2N ||Lack of Factor VIII binding site leading to low Factor VIII levels ||Desmopressin
|-
| Type 2M ||Abnormal protein but normal multimer size ||Humate-P
|-
| Type 3 ||No von Willebrand or Factor VIII present ||Humate-P
|-
| Pseudo Von Willebrand (platelet-type) ||Abnormal gpIIb leading to lower levels of high molecular weight multimers ||Platelets + Humate-P, rVIIa
|-
|}


==See Also==
==See Also==

Revision as of 14:27, 17 June 2015

Background

  • Most common inherited bleeding disorder
  • vWF has two roles:
    • 1. Acts as cofactor for platelet adhesion
    • 2. Acts as carrier protein for factor VIII extending its half life
  • vWD results from quantitative or qualitative dysfunction of Von Willebrand factor

Clinical Features

  • Skin and mucosal bleeding
    • Epistaxis, gingival bleeding, menorrhagia
  • Hemarthrosis is unusual

Differential Diagnosis

Coagulopathy

Platelet Related

Factor Related

Diagnosis

  • Bleeding time: prolonged
  • PT: normal
  • PTT: normal-mildly prolonged
  • vWF activity level: low

Treatment

  • Avoid ASA, NSAIDs, heparin
  • Intermediate purity factor VIII
    • Goal to increase VWF activity by 50-100%
    • Initial infusion of 20-40 IU/Kg
    • High replacement doses may be indicated in more severe disease
  • Platelet transfusion
    • consider if replacement therapy instituted and persistent bleeding
  • Desmopressin
    • Induces release of vWF from endothelial storage sites
    • 0.3mcg/kg IV (max 20mcg) over 30min
  • Aminocaproic acid
  • Recombinant Factor VIIa
    • Consider in type 3 VWD patients who have developed antibodies to VWF replacement
    • Increased risk of thrombosis, especially in patients with coronary artery disease
Types of Von Willebrand Disease Pathophysiology Therapy Procedures
Type 1 Low levels of all proteins Desmopressin Desmopressin Responsive:
Infuse 0.3 ug/kg to end 45 minutes before procedure. May repeat every 24 hours.


For major procedures follow factor VIII levels with plan to keep troughs over 80%
Not desmopressin responsive:
Humate-P to achieve peak over 120% and troughs of 80%. Levels below 30%: 40-50 IU/kg followed by 20 IU/kg every 12 hours
Levels above 30%: 20-40 IU/kg every day

Type 2 Abnormal protein
Type 2A Abnormal protein leading to lower levels of high weight multimers Desmopressin (only effective in 10%), Humate-P
Type 2B Abnormal protein with increased binding to gpIIb leading to lower levels of high weight multimers Humate-P
Type 2N Lack of Factor VIII binding site leading to low Factor VIII levels Desmopressin
Type 2M Abnormal protein but normal multimer size Humate-P
Type 3 No von Willebrand or Factor VIII present Humate-P
Pseudo Von Willebrand (platelet-type) Abnormal gpIIb leading to lower levels of high molecular weight multimers Platelets + Humate-P, rVIIa

See Also

References

  • Tintinalli's Emergency Medicine: A Comprehensive Study Guide, 7e (2010), Chapter 230. Hemophilias and Von Willebrand Disease