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Thrombophilia Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program
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Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

ThrombophiliaThrombophilia

A pediatric perspective.Craig Dobson, MD

CPT, MC, USAR

NCC Pediatrics Residency Program

Page 2: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

DefinitionsDefinitions

Unexpected tendency to form clots under inappropriate circumstances.

Family history of vascular disease under age 50. Incl. MI, CVA or DVT.

Page 3: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

CaseCase

9yo male at presents for eval for psych admission to CNMC for acute psychosis.

Disorganized behavior, non-communicative except occasional screaming fits.

Associated symptoms headache, high fevers, occasional watery stools.

Head CT with contrast notes lateral venous sinus thrombosis. But why?

Page 4: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

EpidemiologyEpidemiology

Venous thrombosis lifetime prevalence 5-10% of total population.

Highest incidence in neonatal and post-pubertal.

Neonates 5/100k.Teens incidence 23/100k.

Page 5: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Neonatal PresentationNeonatal Presentation

Typically in-utero or within first 48hrs of life. Catheter thrombosis.

– Still requires evaluation. Renal vein thrombosis

– Flank mass on exam– Thrombocytopenia, HTN, hematuria.

Seizures from CVA or lesion on head U/S. Neonatal Purpura Fulminans

– Homozygous Protein C or S def.

Page 6: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Adolescent PresentationAdolescent Presentation

DVTCVAAsymptomatic, suspected through FHx.Important to screen to avoid sudden death

early in adulthood.

Page 7: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Coagulation Cascade Coagulation Cascade (Robbins)(Robbins)

Page 8: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Anti-coagulation Anti-coagulation (Subar)(Subar)

Page 9: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Virchow’s Triad Virchow’s Triad (Robbins)(Robbins)

Page 10: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Work UpWork Up

PT/PTT, Mixing studies if elev PTT. CBC ATIII, Protein C&S (total and free) Factor V Leiden Homocysteine level or MTHFR gene mutation Prothrombin G20210A gene mutation Anti-phospholipid Abs Lipoprotein a

Page 11: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Etiology/GeneticEtiology/Genetic

Excessive factor VIII (11/100 whites)Factor V Leiden (8/100 whites)Prothrombin excess (2/100 whites)Antithrombin III def. (1/5000)

Page 12: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Etiology/GeneticEtiology/Genetic

Sickle cell disease (1/400 blacks)Protein C deficiency (1/500)Protein S deficiencyRare conditions: Def in fibrinolysis,

congenital HUS, pro-coagulant platelets.

Page 13: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Etiology/AcquiredEtiology/Acquired

Platelets and RBCs– Polycythemia/thrombocythemia– TTP, HUS

Excess Thrombin– Factor V Leiden– Lupus anticoagulant/ anti-cardiolipin– Incr tissue factor (infection/trauma/malignancy)

Page 14: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Etiology/AcquiredEtiology/Acquired

Def thrombin regulation– ATIII deficiency (renal failure)– Hepatic synthetic dysfunction.– Auto-antibodies– DIC

Medications– OCPs– Heparin– L-asp (really hepatic synth.)

Page 15: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Etiologies/AcquiredEtiologies/Acquired

Homocysteinemia– Smoking– Sedentary lifestyle– Coffee– Diet (low folate, B6 or B12)

Page 16: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Therapies/HeparinTherapies/Heparin

Mechanism: catalysis of AT.Neonates have lower AT levels.Monitoring: aPTTProblems

– aPTT levels based on adult therapeutic studies.– Even in adults, therapeutic aPTT may not

suggest clinically sufficient anti-coag.

Page 17: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Therapies/HeparinTherapies/Heparin

Recommended dose 75U/kg loading.Maintenance drip dose varies:

– Infants <1yr of age 28U/kg/hr– Children > 1yr 20U/kg/hr

Side effects (besides bleeding):– Heparin induced thrombocytopenia– Osteoporosis

Page 18: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Therapies/ LMWHTherapies/ LMWH

Low Molecular Weight HeparinLess monitoring needed, more predictable

blood levels, less osteoporosis.Increase dose needed for age <2mo (0.75mg

Q12). >2mo (0.5mg)Monitor anti-factor Xa levels.

– In children you need to monitor , unlike adults.– Peak is 2-6hrs after injection SQ.

Page 19: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Therapies/Oral-anticoagulantsTherapies/Oral-anticoagulants

Increases vitamin-K dependent proteins (II, VII, IX, X) plus Proteins C & S.

Newborns have reduced levels of vitamin-K dependent proteins. (Shot at birth helps.)

Vitamin K added to formulas.Minimal in breastmilk.

Page 20: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Therapies/Oral Anti-Therapies/Oral Anti-coagulantscoagulants

Monitor INR 2-3.Problem: requires stable diet. Impossible in

2yr old.Some recommend INR 1.5-2.5.Large difference in required dose:

– Infants 0.32mg/kg/d– Teens 0.09mg/kg/d

Page 21: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

Case RevisedCase Revised

Etiology thought originally to be erosive mastoiditis due to fluid in mastoid near lateral venous sinus.

Mastoidectomy performed, culture negative transudate.

Further testing by GI, revealed pt with early presentation of Crohn’s disease.

Page 22: Thrombophilia A pediatric perspective. Craig Dobson, MD CPT, MC, USAR NCC Pediatrics Residency Program.

ReferencesReferences

Manco-Johnson, M & Nuss, R. Advances in Pediatrics, Chp 12, Vol 48. 2001.)

Monagle, et al. Antithrombotic Therapy in Children. Chest. 119 (1), 2001.

Cotran: Robbins Pathologic Basis of Disease, 1999 (all images). Subar M - Clin Geriatr Med - 01-Feb-2001; 17(1): 57-70, vi

Van Cott, E. Coagulation disorders and treatment strategies: laboratory evaluation of hypercoagulable states. Hematology/oncology Clinics of North Amer. V12 (6), 1998.