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Thrombin-antithrombin III complex concentrations (TAT-III) were measured in 18 anaemic haemodialysis patients treated with erythropoietin (Epo) and in four haemodialysis patients treated with i.v. iron dextran. There was a significant early increase in thrombin-antithrombin III in erythropoietin-treated patients which appeared to be independent of the response to erythropoietin (Epo responders (n = 14), pretreatment TAT-III median (range) 3.10 (2.70-9.10) micrograms/l; maximum TAT-III 19.48 (11.18-60.00) micrograms/l, P less than 0.001, Wilcoxon; Epo non-responders (n = 4), pretreatment TAT-III 3.15 (2.90-4.50) micrograms/l, maximum TAT-III 16.00 (10.31-36.12) micrograms/l, P less than 0.001). This was not seen in iron-dextran-treated patients (Pretreatment TAT-III 2.05 (1.90-9.48) micrograms/l, maximum TAT-III 5.60 (2.10-14.50) micrograms/l). The change was not related to haemoglobin, erythropoietin dose, or method of administration, and was transient in nature, thrombin-antithrombin III returning to pretreatment values after approximately 6 months in all patients (Epo responders 6.0(4.0-9.0) months, TAT-III 2.47 (1.30-9.23) micrograms/l; Epo non-responders 7.0 months, TAT-III 5.04 (2.10-7.00) micrograms/l). Increased thrombin-antithrombin III complex may reflect an effect of erythropoietin on microcirculatory factors, which could be relevant to the occurrence of adverse events during treatment.
Taylor et al. (Wed,) studied this question.