J R Soc Med 2002;95:336-342
doi:10.1258/jrsm.95.7.336
© 2002 Royal Society of Medicine
Antiphospholipid syndrome
Sanjay C Keswani BSc MRCP
Naresh Chauhan MRCP 1
Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, USA
1 National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin diseases,
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, USA
Correspondence to: Sanjay C Keswani, Pathology 509, Department of Neurology,
Johns Hopkins Hospital, 600 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21287,
USAE-mail:
skeswani{at}jhmi.edu
 |
INTRODUCTION
|
|---|
The antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) is characterized by thrombosis,
recurrent
fetal death and the presence of circulating antiphospholipid
(aPL)
antibodies
1.
Antiphospholipid antibodies are directed
against anionic phospholipids or
protein-phospholipid complexes,
and the two that are the most clinically
characterized and relevant
are the lupus anticoagulant and anticardiolipin
antibodies.
In this paper we offer a concise review of the vast body of
published
work, highlight the clinical features of the syndrome and the
diagnostic
difficulties associated with testing for lupus anticoagulant
and
anticardiolipin antibodies, outline the proposed mechanisms
of thrombosis and
fetal loss in APS and present evidence for
various treatment modalities.
 |
CLINICAL FEATURES
|
|---|
Antiphospholipid syndrome can be divided into two typesa
primary
form, with no associated systemic disease, and a secondary
form, in which
systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) or a related
connective tissue disease is
present. The major clinical consequence
of APS is a tendency to both venous
and arterial thrombosis.
It is noteworthy, however, that thrombotic events in
a particular
patient with APS tend to segregate into venous or
arteriale.g.
a venous thrombosis is more likely to be followed by
another
venous thrombosis than by an arterial
thrombosis
2. Almost
every
vascular bed can be involved by thrombosis in APS. The most
common site
for venous thrombosis is the deep venous system
of the lower
limb
3. Other sites
include the retinal, renal and
hepatic veins, thrombosis of the last causing
BuddChiari
syndrome. The most frequent manifestation of arterial
thrombosis
is ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack
(TIA)
4. Other
manifestations
include retinal artery occlusion, myocardial infarction and
peripheral
arterial occlusion.
Recurrent pregnancy failure, thought to be in large part due to placental
insufficiency secondary to thrombosis, is associated with
APS5.
First-trimester miscarriages are quite frequent in the normal
(aPL-antibody-negative) population but late pregnancy loss is more specific.
Livedo reticularis may be seen in APSa purple, lace-like rash most
prominent on the limbs, probably due to dermal microvascular thrombosis. Other
cutaneous features of APS are superficial thrombophlebitis, splinter
haemorrhages and skin infarcts. Thrombocytopenia is often seen in APS and is
associated with a thrombotic rather than a bleeding tendency, much as happens
in heparin-induced thrombocytopenia, to which APS has some
similarities6. The
echocardiogram is often abnormal in patients with APS, 4% of patients having
aortic or mitral valve sterile vegetations, akin to those seen in verrucous or
LibmanSacks
endocarditis7.
The frequency of migraine in aPL-antibody-positive individuals with stroke
or TIA is said to be twice that of the general
population8, but
whether the association is causal is uncertain. Tietjen et
al.9, in a large
prospective study, found that the frequency of anticardiolipin antibodies was
no higher in migraine sufferers, under 60 years old, with or without aura,
than in controls. Other purported neurological manifestations of APS include
chorea, transverse myelitis and a vascular dementia. An uncommon and severe
variant of APS is termed catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome, characterized
by rapidly progressive microvascular thrombosis leading to multiorgan failure.
In a review of 50 such patients, the mortality rate was 50%, major causes of
death being cardiac disorders and respiratory failure from adult respiratory
distress
syndrome10.
 |
ASSAYS FOR ANTIPHOSPHOLIPID ANTIBODIES
|
|---|
The conventional tests for antiphospholipid antibodies are coagulation
assays
for lupus anticoagulant and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
(ELISA)
for anticardiolipin
antibodies
11. There
is partial concordance
between these two methods80% of patients with
lupus anticoagulant
have anticardiolipin antibodies, though <50% of
patients
with anticardiolipin antibodies have lupus anticoagulant.
The lupus anticoagulant was first described by Conley and Hartmann at Johns
Hopkins in 195212;
the term is a double misnomer, since most patients with lupus anticoagulant do
not have lupus, and in vivo it is a procoagulant rather than an anticoagulant.
The presence of lupus anticoagulant is reckoned to confer a 30% lifetime risk
of a thrombotic
event13. Lupus
anticoagulant inhibits phospholipid-dependent coagulation, so there may be
prolongation of APTT (activated partial thromboplastin time) and dilute RVVT
(Russell viper venom time). These can be used as screening tests, with the
latter more sensitive than the
former14, but two
further steps are needed to confirm the presence of lupus
anticoagulanta mixing study to demonstrate that the APTT does not
normalize when the patient's plasma is mixed with normal plasma (i.e. there is
an inhibitor present rather than a factor deficient); and a test to
demonstrate phospholipid-dependence (e.g. a platelet neutralization
procedure)15. Lupus
anticoagulant assays have limitations, since they are confounded by heparin
and warfarin and there is no current method to quantify titre.
Cardiolipin is the phospholipid antigen conventionally used in testing for
antiphospholipid syndrome. This phospholipid is mainly found intracellularly
in the mitochondrial membrane, and antibodies to it are responsible for the
false-positive VDRL (Venereal Disease Reference Laboratory) test for syphilis
that one often sees in patients with APS. The first quantitative
anticardiolipin antibody test was established by Harris et al. in 1983 at the
Hammersmith
Hospital16; this
solid-phase radioimmunoassay was later refined to the safer, easier to
perform, ELISA. The anti-cardiolipin antibody ELISA is much less specific for
patients at risk of thromboembolism than the lupus anticoagulant
assays17. This is
because anticardiolipin antibodies can also be found in various non-thrombotic
contextsfor example, in patients taking phenothiazines, hydralazine,
phenytoin, or valproate and in those with infections such as syphilis, Lyme
disease, hepatitis C or
HIV18. These
antibodies can also be detected in a proportion of the normal population,
perhaps in response to common viral
illnesses19. The
anticardiolipin antibodies found in these groups generally carry little risk
of thrombosis (although there are a few case reports of thrombosis in patients
with drug-induced antibodies), and are likely to be in low titre. Evidence has
been accumulating that these benign anticardiolipin antibodies
can be immunologically distinguished from the pathogenic
anticardiolipin antibodies associated with thrombosis and APS.
B2-glycoprotein I (ß2-GPI) is a 50 kd phospholipid-binding
plasma glycoprotein that is a member of the complement control protein family.
Pathogenic anticardiolipin antibodies are dependent on
ß2-GPI for
binding20,21.
Indeed, the anticardiolipin antibodies detected by ELISA in the sera of APS
patients do not actually recognize cardiolipin but rather bind to epitopes on
ß2-GPI. In contrast, benign anticardiolipin antibodies bind
to cardiolipin directly and are not dependent on ß2-GPI for binding.
Anti-ß2-GPI antibodies can help to differentiate between these two
groups22.
The exact roles of ß2-GPI and phospholipid in antibody binding are
disputed23. One
hypothesis is that ß2-GPI bound to a surface (e.g. cell-membrane
phospholipid or the plastic of an assay plate) undergoes a conformational
change, and certain antiphospholipid antibodies bind to exposed
neoepitopes24. A
more likely possibility is that, although anti-ß2GPI antibodies have low
intrinsic affinity, bivalent/multivalent attachment results from
immobilization of the concentrated antigen on a membrane, allowing high
avidity binding, which is detectable in
ELISAs25.
The anticardiolipin antibody isotype that is mainly implicated in
thrombosis is IgGspecifically
IgG226,
whereas infection-related benign aCLs are typically
IgG1 and
IgG327.
Recent data suggest that quantification of antiphospholipid antibody titre is
clinically important, since titre correlates with risk of thrombo-occlusive
events28,29.
In a study by Levine et al. of a group of patients who presented with focal
cerebral ischaemia, those with an anticardiolipin IgG titre >40 had a
six-fold greater risk of subsequent TIAs than the lower-titre group. It is
important to retest for persistence of anticardiolipin antibodies after at
least two months, to exclude transient antibodies that may have no clinical
significance30.
Anti-prothrombin antibodies are found in 50-90% of patients with APS,
particularly in those with the lupus
anticoagulant31.
Whether these antibodies are a risk factor for thromboembolic events has yet
to be established.
 |
PRELIMINARY CLASSIFICATION CRITERIA FOR DEFINITE
APS
|
|---|
To facilitate studies of treatment and causation, an international
consensus
statement on preliminary classification criteria for
definite
APS has lately been published (Sapporo Workshop
Criteria)
32.
The
clinical criteria used were vascular thrombosis (arterial,
venous, or small
vessel) and pregnancy morbidity (including
fetal death and three or more
unexplained consecutive spontaneous
miscarriages before the tenth week of
gestation). The laboratory
criteria included the presence, on two or more
occasions at
least six weeks apart, of medium or high titre IgG and/or IgM
anticardiolipin
antibodies in blood, and of lupus anticoagulant in plasma.
Definite
APS was considered present in a particular patient if at least
one of
the clinical criteria and one of the laboratory criteria
were met. Other
features such as thrombocytopenia, haemolytic
anaemia, transient cerebral
ischaemia, transverse myelopathy,
livedo reticularis, cardiac valve disease,
chorea and migraine
were not included as criteria for definite APS.
 |
A HETEROGENEOUS GROUP OF AUTOANTIBODIES
|
|---|
A multitude of protein targets for antiphospholipid
antibodies
have been described including ß2-GPI, prothrombin,
protein C,
protein S, thrombomodulin, annexin V, kininogens,
C4-binding protein (a
complement protein that regulates free
protein S levels), and vascular heparan
sulphate
proteoglycan
33.
Furthermore,
there is extensive cross-reactivity between anticardiolipin
antibodies
and other negatively charged phospholipids, such as
phosphatidylserine
and phosphatidylinositol. Thus, antiphospholipid antibodies
are
a very heterogeneous family of autoantibodies, and most patients
with
antiphospholipid syndrome have a mixture of autoantibodies
reacting with
various phospholipids and plasma proteins, some
of which are involved in the
coagulation and anticoagulation
cascades.
In a paper that generated much discussion Toschi et
al.34 reported a
very high prevalence (44%) of antibodies to one or more of seven different
phospholipids (which it should be noted were all ß2-GPI dependent) in a
population of 77 non-SLE patients aged 50 years or less with cryptogenic
stroke or TIA. Furthermore, nearly one-quarter of the patients who lacked
anticardiolipin antibodies showed immunoreactivity to one of the other
phospholipids. Among the antiphospholipid antibodies studied, those with
specificity for phosphatidylinositol had the highest prevalence. Toschi et al.
concluded that, if one assesses only anticardiolipin antibodies and lupus
anticoagulant in young stroke patients, one may be underestimating the true
prevalence of antiphospholipid antibodies. However, when Branch et
al.35 evaluated
antibodies to several phospholipids they concluded that, if lupus
anticoagulant and anticardiolipin are absent, testing for individual aPL
antibodies is not worth while.
 |
MECHANISM OF THROMBOSIS
|
|---|
Histopathologically and characteristically, the vascular occlusions
in
antiphospholipid syndrome are non-inflammatory: the thrombus
is
fibrin-platelet and there is no evidence of vasculitis. There
are many
theories but no consensus as to why pathological clotting
occurs in
antiphospholipid syndrome. As already mentioned, antiphospholipid
antibodies
can bind to various plasma proteins involved in anticoagulationsuch
as
protein C, protein S and thrombomodulinand by altering
their function
may create a permissive thrombotic
environment
33.
Similarly,
autoantibody activity against ß2-GPI, which is thought
to have
anticoagulant properties and antiplatelet activity by
the inhibition of
ADP-mediated platelet aggregation, may have
a prothrombotic effect. However,
it should be noted that individuals
with inherited deficiencies of ß2-GPI
do not seem
to have an increased risk for
thrombosis
36.
Studies of the recently
produced ß2-GPI knockout mice may shed further
light
on this
37.
Some antiphospholipid antibodies bind vascular endothelial
cells, and in vitro
studies have shown that adhesion molecule
expression is increased on
endothelial cells in the presence
of antiphospholipid antibodies, facilitating
platelet
adherence
38.
Furthermore,
there is evidence that patients with APS have increased levels
of
antibodies to oxidized LDL, which is associated with progression
of
atherosclerosis and risk of thromboocclusive
events
39,40.
Rand et al. have proposed another hypothesis for the mechanism of
thrombosis in APSantibody-mediated disruption of the annexin V
antithrombotic
shield41.
Annexin V is thought to form a protective carpet shielding anionic
phospholipids from participating in coagulation reactions; these phospholipids
would otherwise serve as efficient cofactors for the assembly of coagulation
factor complexes. The clustering of annexin V on the surface is disrupted by
high-affinity antiphospholipid antibodies, resulting in a prothrombotic state.
Another group has suggested that inhibition of annexin V binding to
procoagulant phospholipid surfaces is dependent upon anti-ß2-GPI
antibodies42.
Another possibility is dysfunction of factors important in maintaining
lipid symmetry of the membrane bilayersuch as aminophospholipid
translocase, floppase and lipid scramblaseresulting in
exposure of normally secluded negatively charged phospholipids to the cell
surface. This loss of membrane phospholipid symmetry has been shown to occur
in apoptosisindeed, Ranch et al. hypothesized that apoptotic cells not
only serve as targets of aPL antibodies but also participate in the induction
of aPL
antibodies43.
 |
PREGNANCY LOSS
|
|---|
aPL antibodies are found in less than 2% of normal pregnant
women and in up
to 20% of women with recurrent pregnancy
loss
44.
These
antibodies are associated with adverse pregnancy outcome
at all gestational
agesfrom first-trimester miscarriage,
through second-trimester
pregnancy loss, pre-eclampsia and intrauterine
growth retardation to preterm
labour
45,46.
These complications
are thought to be caused largely by uteroplacental
insufficiency
from multiple placental thromboses, infarcts and a spiral artery
vasculopathy
in decidual vessels. Some workers have proposed alternative
mechanisms
for pregnancy loss, since thrombosis is neither a universal
nor a
specific feature of aPL-associated
miscarriage
47.
These
include abnormal eicosanoid metabolism induced in gestational
tissues by
aPL antibodies, leading to impaired trophoblast invasion
and
expansion
48.
 |
STROKE
|
|---|
In the Antiphospholipid Antibodies in Stroke Study (APASS) in
1993, 255
consecutive first ischaemic stroke patients were compared
with age and sex
matched non-stroke controls. The frequency
of anticardiolipin antibodies was
substantially higher in those
with ischaemic stroke (10% v 4%) and furthermore
their presence
seemed to be an independent risk factor for stroke in these
patients
49.
In the
two-year follow-up APASS study anticardiolipin positivity
did not carry an
increased risk of subsequent thrombo-occlusive
events or
death
50; however,
the cut-off titre for positivity
was only 10 GPL units and, since low titres
of anticardiolipin
antibodies often represent a transient non-specific
phenomenon,
the effect of high titres was considerably
dilutedfurthermore,
the median follow-up of 2 years may have been too
short for
detection of a small but clinically important difference.
Stroke associated with anticardiolipin antibodies affects a younger
population and proportionately more females than typical atherothrombotic
stroke51. In a
recent prospective study of patients with high titres of anticardiolipin
antibodies (>100), 26 of the 27 patients had recurrent cerebrovascular
ischaemic events despite treatment (most were on aspirin and coumadin) over
the 3 years of
follow-up52. These
events were more likely to be TIAs (mean rate 25% per year) than strokes (5%
per year). A high titre of anticardiolipin antibodies was associated with
other stroke risk factors, including cigarette smoking and
hyperlipidaemiaan observation made also by others. One hypothesis is
that endothelial injury caused by the presence of conventional stroke risk
factors leads to exposure of antigens that are normally secluded within the
phospholipid bilayer, thus stimulating an antiphospholipid antibody response.
Young patients with persistently high anticardiolipin IgG levels (>100
units) and stroke or TIA were almost invariably cigarette smokers.
 |
TREATMENT OF ANTIPHOSPHOLIPID SYNDROME
|
|---|
Modification of cardiovascular risk factors is important: the
patient
should avoid the contraceptive pill, refrain from smoking,
exercise regularly
and maintain ideal weight; hypercholesterolaemia
and hypertension should be
treated, and diabetes closely controlled
if present. With regard to
antithrombotic therapy, two retrospective
studies have been helpful. One was a
review
2 of 70
patients
with aPL-associated thrombosis, on various empiric treatment
regiments,
with a five-year follow-up. Warfarin with an intermediate to
high
intensity of anticoagulation (international normalized
ratio [INR]>2.6) was
effective in preventing further thrombotic
events. In contrast, lower
intensity warfarin and aspirin (dose
80-325 mg per day) were ineffective. In
another study
53,
the
efficacy of high-intensity warfarin (INR>3), low intensity
warfarin
(INR<3) with and without low-dose aspirin, and low-dose
aspirin (75 mg per
day) alone was assessed in the secondary
prevention of thrombosis in 147
patients with APS. Median follow-up
was 6 years and 69% had recurrent
thrombotic events. Recurrence
rates per year were 0.01 for high intensity
warfarin, 0.23 for
low intensity warfarin, 0.18 for aspirin alone and 0.29 for
the
untreated group. Aspirin conferred no additional benefit when
added to
warfarin. The conclusion was that an INR>3 is effective
in preventing
thrombotic events, and that there is no benefit
from low-dose aspirin or an
INR of 2-3. However, before these
data are extrapolated to a particular
patient with APS, we do
well to remember that the trials were not prospective
or randomized,
and that high-intensity anticoagulation carries a risk of
serious
haemorrhage
54.
In contrast, the obstetric management of APS is now clearly delineated by
two prospective randomized studies. In the trial reported by Rai et
al.55, pregnant
women with recurrent miscarriage associated with aPL antibodies were
randomized to low-dose aspirin with or without a low-dose of unfractionated
heparin (5000U) twice daily, at the first detection of fetal cardiac activity
and continued until 34 weeks' gestation. The rate of live births was
significantly higher in the combination group than in the group receiving
low-dose aspirin alone. In the study conducted by Kutteh et
al.56, pregnant
women with a history of three or more pregnancy losses and aPL antibody levels
of >27 IgG or >23 IgM phospholipid units were randomized to receive
low-dose aspirin with or without adjusted doses of heparin to maintain a
mid-interval APTT of 1.5 fold. Treatment was begun when fetal cardiac activity
was first detected and continued until term. This study likewise showed that
the live-birth rate was significantly greater for the treatment combination
group than for those who received low-dose aspirin alone (80% vs 44%). With
aspirin and heparin treatment the live-birth rate of women with APS approaches
that of normal aPL-antibody-negative women.
Another treatment approach is immunotherapy. There is, however, no
conclusive evidence supporting this approach, most of the reported studies
being small and non-controlled. Corticosteroids and other immunosuppressant
therapies, such as azathioprine, cyclophosphamide and methotrexate, have been
reported in some studies to decrease titres of lupus anticoagulant and
anticardiolipin antibodies, but do not seem to decrease thrombotic
risk57,58.
The most promising immunotherapies, which still need to be comprehensively
studied in a controlled fashion (in view of their success in other
antibody-mediated auto-immune diseases such as myasthenia gravis and
idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura) are intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) and
plasma
exchange59,60.
However, a prospective, placebo-controlled, randomized pilot study of pregnant
women with APS showed no benefit from IVIG over and above that conferred by
aspirin and heparin
therapy61;
furthermore, no significant clinical benefit was shown in a recent
meta-analysis of IVIG therapy for women with unexplained recurrent
miscarriage62.
 |
CONCLUSIONS
|
|---|
Antiphospholipid syndrome is an important cause of hypercoagulability,
predisposing
to both venous and arterial thromboses and recurrent fetal death
due
to placental insufficiency. Despite the name, the antibodies
associated
with APS are predominantly directed against phospholipid-binding
plasma
proteins, such as ß2-GPI and prothrombin, rather
than phospholipids
themselves. When APS is suspected, confirmatory
laboratory tests include
coagulation assays for lupus anticoagulant
and ELISA detection of
anticardiolipin antibodies, the former
being more specific and the latter more
sensitive. Interpretation
of the pathological significance of anticardiolipin
antibodies
can be problematic since these antibodies are found in various
non-thrombotic
contexts (certain infections, drug therapy) and even in
apparently
healthy people. The associated presence of lupus anticoagulant,
anticardiolipin
antibody in high titre (> 40 GPL units for IgG isotype),
persistence
of anticardiolipin antibody for at least 6 weeks, and its
dependence
on the plasma glycoprotein ß2-GPI for binding suggests
pathogenicity.
Pending formal assay standardization, testing for antibodies
to
ß2-GPI and to non-cardiolipin phospholipids is
indicated in patients who
are strongly suspected to have APS
but who have negative tests for
anticardiolipin antibody and
lupus anticoagulant. For prevention of recurrent
thrombosis
in APS the present recommendation is to maintain an INR >
3.
However, this is based on retrospective non-controlled evidence,
and
high-intensity anticoagulation carries an important risk
of haemorrhage. Until
definitive data from prospective trials
are available, the intensity of
anticoagulation will need to
be individualized for patients with APS, the
risks of haemorrhagic
complications being weighed against the benefits of
preventing
re-thrombosis. Prospective randomized trials have shown the
efficacy
of aspirin and heparin treatment in the prevention of pregnancy
loss
in APS. Evidence for the use of other treatment strategies,
such as
immunotherapy, remains unpersuasive.
 |
Acknowledgments
|
|---|
We thank Drs Betty Diamond, Gregory Dennis (National Institute
of Arthritis
and Musculoskeletal and Skin diseases, National
Institutes of Health), Robert
Wityk, Dorothy Chung and Justin
McArthur (Department of Neurology, Johns
Hopkins Hospital),
for commenting on the paper.
 |
REFERENCES
|
|---|
-
Harris EN. Syndrome of the black swan. Br J
Rheumatol 1987;26:324
-6[Free Full Text]
-
Rosove MH, Brewer PMC. Antiphospholipid thrombosis: clinical course
after the first thrombotic event in 70 patients. Ann Intern Med1992; 117:303
-8
-
Bick RL, Jakway J, Baker WF. Deep vein thrombosis: prevalence of
etiologic factors and results of management in 100 consecutive patients.Semin Thromb Hemost1992; 18:267
-74[Medline]
-
Levine SR. Antiphospholipid syndromes and the nervous system:
clinical features, mechanisms and treatment. Semin Neurol1994; 14:168
-76[Medline]
-
Lockshin MD, Druzin ML, Goei S. Antibody to cardiolipin as a
predictor of fetal distress or death in pregnant patients with systemic lupus
erythematosus. N Engl J Med1985; 313:152
-6[Abstract]
-
Arnout J. The pathogenesis of the antiphospholipid syndrome: a
hypothesis based on parallelisms with heparin-induced thrombocytopenia.Thromb Haemost
1996;75:536
-41[Medline]
-
Vianna JL, Khamashta MA, Ordi-Ros J, et al. Comparison of the
primary and secondary antiphospholipid sydrome: a European multicenter study
of 114 patients. Am J Med1994; 96:3
-9[Medline]
-
Hinse P, Schulz A, Haag F, Carvajal-Lizano M, Thie A.
Anticardiolipin antibodies in oculocerebral ischaemia and migraine: prevalence
and prognostic value. J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis1993; 3:168
-73
-
Tietjen GE, Day M, Norris L, Aurora S, et al. Role of
anticardiolipin antibodies in young persons with migraine and transient focal
neurologic events. Neurology1998; 50:1433
-40[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Asherson RA, Cervera R, Piette JC, et al. Catastrophic
antiphospholipid syndrome. Clinical and laboratory features of 50 patients.Medicine (Baltimore)1998; 77:195
-207[Medline]
-
Brandt JT, Triplett DA, Alving B, Scharrer I. Criteria for the
diagnosis of the lupus anticoagulants: an update. On behalf of the
Subcommittee on Lupus Anticoagulant/Antiphospholipid Antibody of the
Scientific and Standardization Committee of the ISTH. Thromb
Haemost 1995;74:1185
-90[Medline]
-
Conley CL, Hartmann RC. A hemorrhagic disorder caused by
circulating anticoagulant in patients with disseminated lupus erythematosus.J Clin Invest
1952;31:621
-2
-
Lechner K, Pabinger-Fashing IP. Lupus anticoagulants and
thrombosis. A study of 25 cases and review of the literature.Haemostasis
1985;15:252
-62
-
Saxena R, Saraya AK, Kotte VK. Evaluation of four coagulation tests
to detect plasma lupus anticoagulants. Am J Clin Pathol1991; 96:755
-8[Medline]
-
Triplett DA. Coagulation assays for the lupus anticoagulant: review
and critique of current methodology. Stroke1992; 23(suppl I):I-11
-I-14
-
Harris EN, Gharavi AE, Boey ML, et al. Anticardiolipin antibodies:
detection by radioimmunoassay and association with thrombosis.Lancet
1983;ii:1211
-14
-
Horbach DA, Oort EV, Donders RCJM, Derksen RHWM, de Groot PG. Lupus
anticoagulant is the strongest risk factor for both venous and arterial
thrombosis in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus: comparison between
different assays for the detection of antiphospholipid antibodies.Thromb Haemost
1996;76:916
-24[Medline]
-
Triplett DA, Brandt JT. The relationship between lupus
anticoagulants and antibodies to phospholipid. JAMA1988; 259:550
-4[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Vila P, Hernandez MC, Lopez-Fernandez MF. Prevalence, follow-up and
clinical significance of the anticardiolipin antibodies in normal subjects.Thromb Haemostas
1994;72:209
-13[Medline]
-
McNeil HP, Simpson RJ, Chesterman CN, Krilis SA. Antiphospholipid
antibodies are directed against a complex antigen that includes a
lipid-binding inhibitor of coagulation: ß2 glycoprotein I
(apolipo-protein H). Proc Natl Acad Sci USA1990; 87:4120
-4[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Galli M, Comfurius P, Maassen C, et al. Anticardiolipin antibodies
(ACA) directed not to cardiolipin but to a plasma protein cofactor.Lancet
1990;335:1544
-7[Medline]
-
McNally T, Purdy G, Mackie IJ, Machin SJ, Isenberg DA. The use of
an anti ß2-glycoprotein I assay for discrimination between
anticardiolipin antibodies associated with infection and increased risk for
thrombosis. Br J Haematol1995; 91:471
-3[Medline]
-
Greaves M. Antiphospholipid antibodies and thrombosis.Lancet
1999;353:1348
-53[Medline]
-
Ichikawa K, Khamashta MA, Koike T, Matsuura E, Hughes GRV.
ß2-glycoprotein I reactivity of monoclonal anticardiolipin antibodies
from patients with the antiphospholipid syndrome. Arthritis
Rheum 1994;37:1453
-61[Medline]
-
Roubey RAS, Eisenberg RA, Harper MF, Winfield JB.
"Anticardiolipin" autoantibodies recognize beta2-glycoprotein I in
the absence of phospholipid: importance of antigen density and bivalent
binding. J Immunol1995; 154:954
-60[Abstract]
-
Sammaritano LR, Ng S, Sobel R, et al. Anticardiolipin IgG
subclasses: associations of IgG2 with arterial and/or venous thrombosis.Arthritis Rheum
1997;40:1998
-2006[Medline]
-
Levy RA, Gharavi AE, Samaritano LR, Habina L, Qamar T, Lockshin MD.
Characteristics of IgG antiphospholipid antibodies in patients with systemic
lupus erythematosus and syphilis. J Rheumatol1990; 17:1036
-41[Medline]
-
Levine SR, Salowich-Palm L, Sawaya KL, et al. IgG anticardiolipin
antibody titer > 40 GPL and the risk of subsequent thrombo-occlusive events
and death: a prospective cohort study. Stroke1997; 28:1660
-5[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Finazzi G, Brancaccio V, Moia M, et al. Natural history and risk
factors for thrombosis in 360 patients with antiphospholipid antibodies: a
4-year prospective study from the Italian registry. Am J Med1996; 100:530
-6[Medline]
-
Tanne D, Triplett DA, Levine SR. Antiphospholipid-protein
antibodies and ischemic stroke. Not just cardiolipin any more.Stroke
1998;29:1755
-8[Free Full Text]
-
Galli M. Should we include anti-prothrombin antibodies in the
screening for antiphospholipid syndrome? J Autoimmun2000; 15:101
-5[Medline]
-
Wilson WA, Gharavi AE, Koike T, Lockshin MD, Branch DW, et al.
International consensus statement on preliminary classification criteria for
definite antiphospholipid syndrome. Arthritis Rheum1999; 42:1309
-11[Medline]
-
Oosting JD, Derksen RHWM, Bobbink IWG, Hackeng TM, Bouma BN, De
Groot PG. Antiphospholipid antibodies directed against a combination of
phospholipids with prothrombin, protein C, or protein S: an explanation for
their pathogenic mechanism? Blood1993; 81:2618
-25[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Toschi V, Motta A, Castelli C, Paracchini ML, Zerbi D, Gibelli A.
High prevalence of antiphosphatidylinositol antibodies in young patients with
cerebral ischaemia of undetermined cause. Stroke1998; 29:1759
-64[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Branch DW, Silver RM, Pierangelli SS, et al. Antiphospholipid
antibodies other than lupus anticoagulant and anticardiolipin antibodies in
women with recurrent pregnancy loss, fertile controls, and antiphospholipid
syndrome. Obstet Gynecol1997; 89:549
-55[Medline]
-
Takeuchi R, Yasuda S, Atsumi T, Ieko M, Takeya H, Horita T.
Coagulation and fibrinolytic characteristics in a ß2-glycoprotein I
deficiency. Lupus 1998;7:S191
-
Sheng Y, Herzog H, Krilis SA. Generation of ß2-glycoprotein I
gene targeting construct for disruption of the ß2-GPI gene.Arthritis Rheum
1998;41:S135
-
Simantov R, LaSala JM, Lo SK, et al. Activation of cultured
vascular endothelial cells by antiphospholipid antibodies. J Clin
Invest 1995;96:2211
-19
-
Puurunen M, Manttari M, Manninen V, et al. Antibodies to oxidized
low-density lipoprotein predicting myocardial infarction. Arch Intern
Med 1994;154:2605
-9[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Salonen JT, Yla-Hertutuala S, Yamamoto R, et al. Autoantibodies
against oxidized LDL and progression of carotid atherosclerosis.Lancet
1992;339:883
-7[Medline]
-
Rand JH, Wu X. Antibody-mediated disruption of the annexin-V
antithrombotic shield: a new mechanism for thrombosis in the antiphospholipid
syndrome. Thromb Haemost1999; 82:649
-55[Medline]
-
Hanly JG, Smith SA. Anti-beta2-glycoprotein I (GPI) autoantibodies,
annexin V binding and the antiphospholipid syndrome. Clin Exp
Immunol 2000;120:537
-43[Medline]
-
Rauch J, Subang R, D'Agnillo P, Koh JS, Levine JS. Apoptosis and
the antiphospholipid syndrome. J Autoimmun2000; 15:231
-5[Medline]
-
Lockshin MD. Pregnancy loss in the antiphospholipid syndrome.Thromb Hemostat
1999;82:641
-8[Medline]
-
Branch DW, Silver RM, Blackwell JL, et al. Outcome of treated
pregnancies in women with antiphospholipid syndrome: an update of the Utah
experience. Obstet Gynecol1992; 80:614
-20[Medline]
-
Rai R. Obstetric management of antiphospholipid syndrome. J
Autoimmun 2000;15:203
-7[Medline]
-
Salafia CM, Parke AL. Placental pathology in systemic lupus
erythematosus and phospholipid antibody syndrome. Rheum Dis Clin N
Am 1997;23:85
-97[Medline]
-
Peaceman AM, Rehnberg KA. The effect of immunoglobulin G fractions
from patients with lupus anticoagulant on placental prostacyclin and
thromboxane production. Am J Obstet Gynecol1993; 169:1403
-6[Medline]
-
The Antiphospholipid Antibodies in Stroke Study (APASS) Group.
Anticardiolipin antibodies are an independent risk factor for first ischemic
stroke. Neurology 1993;43:2069
-73[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
The Antiphospholipid Antibodies in Stroke Study Group (APASS).
Anticardiolipin antibodies and the risk of recurrent thrombo-occlusive events
and death. Neurology1997; 48:91
-4[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Brey RL, Hart RG, Sherman DG, Tegeler CH. Antiphospholipid
antibodies and cerebral ischemia in young people. Neurology1990; 40:1190
-6[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Verro P, Levine SR, Tietjen GE. Cerebrovascular ischemic events
with high positive anticardiolipin antibodies. Stroke1998; 29:2245
-53[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Khamashta MA, Cuadrado MJ, Mujic F, Taub N, Hunt BJ, Hughes GRV.
The management of thrombosis in the antiphospholipid-antibody syndrome.N Engl J Med
1995;332:993
-7[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Palaretti G, Leali N, Coccheri S, et al. Bleeding complications of
oral anticoagulant treatment: an inception-cohort, prospective collaboration
study (ISCOAT). Lancet1996; 348:423
-8[Medline]
-
Rai R, Cohen H, Dave M, Regan L. Randomised controlled trial of
aspirin plus aspirin and heparin in pregnant women with recurrent miscarriage
associated with phospholipid antibodies (or antiphospholipid antibodies).BMJ
1997;314:253
-7[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Kutteh WH. Antiphospholipid antibody-associated recurrent pregnancy
loss: treatment with heparin and low-dose aspirin is superior to low-dose
aspirin alone. Am J Obstet Gynecol1996; 174:1584
-9[Medline]
-
Laskin CA, Bombardier C, Hannah ME. Prednisone and aspirin in women
and autoantibodies and unexplained recurrent fetal loss. N Engl J
Med 1997;337:148
-53[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Boumpas DT, Barez S, Klippel JG, Balow JE. Intermittent
cyclophosphamide for the treatment of autoimmune thrombocytopenia in systemic
lupus erythematosus. Ann Intern Med1990; 112:674
-7
-
Flamholz R, Tran T, Grad GI, et al. Therapeutic plasma exchange for
the acute management of the catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome: beta
(2)-glycoprotein I antibodies as a marker of response to therapy. J
Clin Apheresis 1999;14:171
-6[Medline]
-
Sherer Y, Levy Y, Schoenfeld Y. Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy
of antiphospholipid syndrome. Rheumatology (Oxford)2000; 39:421
-6[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Branch DW, Peaceman AM, Druzin M, et al. A multicenter
placebo-controlled pilot study of intravenous immune globulin treatment of
antiphospholipid syndrome during pregnancy. The Pregnancy Loss Study Group.Am J Obstet Gynecol2000; 182:122
-7[Medline]
-
Daya S, Gunby J, Porter F, Scott J, Clark DA. Critical analysis of
intravenous immunoglobulin therapy for recurrent miscarriage. Hum
Reprod Update 1999;5:475
-82[Abstract/Free Full Text]

CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
Technorati What's this?
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
M. Gayed and C. Gordon
Pregnancy and rheumatic diseases
Rheumatology,
November 1, 2007;
46(11):
1634 - 1640.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
A. Proven, R. P. Bartlett, K. G. Moder, A. Chang-Miller, L. K. Cardel, J. A. Heit, H. A. Homburger, T. M. Petterson, T. J. H. Christianson, and W. L. Nichols
Clinical Importance of Positive Test Results for Lupus Anticoagulant and Anticardiolipin Antibodies
Mayo Clin. Proc.,
April 1, 2004;
79(4):
467 - 475.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|