Is severe thrombocytopenia during heparin treatment mediated by an immune mechanism?
This case series provides evidence that heparin-induced thrombocytopenia is an immune-mediated syndrome caused by heparin-dependent antiplatelet antibodies.
We studied five patients in whom severe thrombocytopenia developed during intermittent intravenous heparin treatment of arterial and venous thrombosis. Platelet aggregation was demonstrated when heparin (0.5 U per milliliter) was incubated with the patients' citrated platelet-rich plasma or with normal platelet-rich plasma in the presence of the patients' serum. Antiplatelet antibody was not detected in the patient globulin fractions prepared from serum collected within one week after heparin withdrawal by use of the platelet factor 3 availability technic. When the studies were repeated with modifications to detect heparin-dependent antiplatelet antibodies, positive results were obtained in four of five patients. The data suggest that a casual relation, mediated by an immune mechanism, existed between heparin therapy and thrombocytopenia, and that this syndrome may occur more often than has previously.
Babcock et al. (Thu,) studied this question.