Summary
The diagnosis of heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is based on clinical criteria
and biological assays. Most immunoassays detect antibodies (either IgG alone or additionally
IgA and IgM) against PF4 immobilised in wells of microtiter plates with stoichiometric
concentrations of polyanion (heparin or polyvinylsulfonate). We studied whether diagnostic
sensitivity and/or specificity for HIT could be improved using a novel assay in which
unfractionated heparin is immobilised alone to the microwells, with PF4 (and, potentially,
other heparin-dependent antigen proteins) provided by adding platelet lysate during
the procedure. Samples from 101 patients with suspected HIT and from 101 controls
(including 50 with antiphospholipid antibodies) were tested. The global assay (Zymutest
HIA IgG/A/M®, Hyphen BioMed) was positive for 39 of 40 patients with definite HIT (positive PF4-specific
ELISA and positive serotonin release assay). It was positive in only two of the 101
control patients studied and also in 14 of the 61 patients with suspected HIT for
whom the disease was excluded (specificity (sp): 77%). On the other hand, Zymutest
HIA IgG®, an IgG-specific assay, was positive in only six patients without HIT (Sp: 90%).
Heparin-dependent IgG antibodies were present at higher levels in patients with definite
HIT than in those for whom the diagnosis of HIT was ruled out. A single ELISA that
detects IgG antibodies is more effective for the diagnosis of HIT in clinical practice.
These results also support the hypothesis that heparin-dependent antibodies of IgG
class have a major role in the pathogenesis of HIT.
Keywords
Thrombocytopenia - heparin - IgG - immunoassays