Recurrent arterial thrombosis linked to autoimmune antibodies enhancing von Willebrand factor binding to platelets and inducing FcγRII receptor- mediated platelet activation

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Abstract

A patient with a history of recurrent late fetal loss associated with multiple placental infarcts and cerebrovascular ischemia at the age of 36, followed a year later by a myocardial infarction, was referred for further investigation. Coronary angiography was normal. Antinuclear factor, lupus anticoagulant, anticardiolipin antibodies, and other thrombophilia parameters were negative, but there was moderate hyperthyroldism with positive thyroid peroxidase antibodies. Platelet numbers and von Willebrand factor (vWF) were normal. Her platelets showed spontaneous aggregation that disappeared with aspirin intake. However, aggregation still was induced by low levels of ristocetin (0.3 to 0.5 mg/mL). The low-dose ristocetin aggregation in patient pistelet-rich plasma (PRP) was completely blocked by neutralizing antiglycoprotein Ib (GPIb) and anti-vWF antibodies. The monoclonal anti- FcγRil receptor antibody IV.3 inhibited partly, which suggests that PRP aggregation by low-dose ristocetin was elicited by vWF-immunoglobulin (Ig) complexes. Upon addition to washed human platelets, with vWF (10 μg/mL), purified patient Igs dose-dependently enhanced ristocatin (0.15 mg/mL)- induced aggregation between 0 and 500 μg/mL, an affect that disappeared again above 1 mg/mL. Aggregation was dependent on the vWF concentration and was blocked by IV.3 or neutralizing anti-GPIb or anti-vWF antibodies. The spontaneous aggregation of normal platelets resuspended in patient plasma could be inhibited totally by IV.3 and partially by neutralizing anti-GPIb or anti-vWF antibodies. Perfusion with normal anticoagulated blood, enriched with 10% of control or patient plasma, over surfaces coated with vWF showed increased platelet adhesion and activation in the presence of patient antibodies. Tractment of the patient with the antithyroid drug thiamazol and temporary corticosteroids, aspirin, and ticlopidine did not correct the platelet hypersensitivity to ristocetin. These observations suggest that some autoantibodies to vWF may both enhance vWF binding to platelets and cause platelet activation through binding to the FcγRII receptor, and therapy may be responsible for a new form of antibody-mediated thrombosis.

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Hoylaerts, M. F., Thys, C., Arnout, J., & Vermylen, J. (1998). Recurrent arterial thrombosis linked to autoimmune antibodies enhancing von Willebrand factor binding to platelets and inducing FcγRII receptor- mediated platelet activation. Blood, 91(8), 2810–2817. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v91.8.2810.2810_2810_2817

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