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Impact of breast cancer stage, time from diagnosis and chemotherapy on plasma and cellular biomarkers of hypercoagulability

BACKGROUND: In breast cancer patients routine thromboprophylaxis is not recommended but individualized risk assessment is encouraged. The incorporation of hypercoagulability biomarkers could increase the sensitivity of risk assessment models (RAM) to identify patients at VTE risk. To this aim we inv...

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Autores principales: Chaari, Mourad, Ayadi, Ines, Rousseau, Aurelie, Lefkou, Eleftheria, Van Dreden, Patrick, Sidibe, Fatoumata, Ketatni, Hela, Galea, Vassiliki, Khaterchi, Amir, Bouzguenda, Racem, Frikha, Mounir, Ghorbal, Lilia, Daoud, Jamel, Kallel, Choumous, Quinn, Martin, Gligorov, Joseph, Lotz, Jean Pierre, Hatmi, Mohamed, Elalamy, Ismail, Gerotziafas, Grigoris T
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4324665/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25535397
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-14-991
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author Chaari, Mourad
Ayadi, Ines
Rousseau, Aurelie
Lefkou, Eleftheria
Van Dreden, Patrick
Sidibe, Fatoumata
Ketatni, Hela
Galea, Vassiliki
Khaterchi, Amir
Bouzguenda, Racem
Frikha, Mounir
Ghorbal, Lilia
Daoud, Jamel
Kallel, Choumous
Quinn, Martin
Gligorov, Joseph
Lotz, Jean Pierre
Hatmi, Mohamed
Elalamy, Ismail
Gerotziafas, Grigoris T
author_facet Chaari, Mourad
Ayadi, Ines
Rousseau, Aurelie
Lefkou, Eleftheria
Van Dreden, Patrick
Sidibe, Fatoumata
Ketatni, Hela
Galea, Vassiliki
Khaterchi, Amir
Bouzguenda, Racem
Frikha, Mounir
Ghorbal, Lilia
Daoud, Jamel
Kallel, Choumous
Quinn, Martin
Gligorov, Joseph
Lotz, Jean Pierre
Hatmi, Mohamed
Elalamy, Ismail
Gerotziafas, Grigoris T
author_sort Chaari, Mourad
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: In breast cancer patients routine thromboprophylaxis is not recommended but individualized risk assessment is encouraged. The incorporation of hypercoagulability biomarkers could increase the sensitivity of risk assessment models (RAM) to identify patients at VTE risk. To this aim we investigated the impact of cancer-related characteristics on hypercoagulability biomarkers. METHODS: Thrombin generation (TG) assessed with the Thrombogramme-Thrombinoscope®, levels of platelet derived microparticles (Pd-MP) assessed with flow cytometry, procoagulant phospholid dependent clotting time (PPL-ct) measured with a clotting assay and D-Dimers (were assessed in a cohort of 62 women with breast cancer and in 30 age matched healthy women. RESULTS: Patients showed significantly higher TG, Pd-MP, D-Dimers levels and shortened PPL-ct compared to the controls. The PPL-ct was inversely correlated with the levels of Pd-MP, which were increased in 97% of patients. TG and D-Dimers were increased in 76% and 59% of patients respectively. In any stage of the disease TG was significantly increased as compared to the controls. There was no significant difference of TG in patients with local, regional of metastatic stage. There was no significant difference in Pd-MP or Pd-MP/PS(+) between the subgroups of patients with local or regional stage of cancer. Patients with metastatic disease had significantly higher levels of Pd-MP and Pd-MP/PS(+) compared to those with regional stage. The D-Dimers increased in patients with metastatic stage. In patients on chemotherapy with less than 6 months since diagnosis TG was significantly higher compared to those on chemotherapy who diagnosed in interval > 6 months. Patients with metastatic disease had significantly higher levels of Pd-MP and D-Dimers compared to those with non-metastatic disease. CONCLUSION: In breast cancer patients the stage, the time elapsed since the diagnosis and the administration of chemotherapy are determinants of cellular and plasma hypercoagulability. The levels and the procoagulant activity of Pd-MP are interconnected with the biological activity and the overall burden of cancer. TG reflects the procoagulant properties of both breast cancer and chemotherapy in the initial period of cancer diagnosis. Thus the weighted incorporation of the biomarkers of cellular and plasma hypercoagulabilty in RAM for VTE might improve their predictive value.
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spelling pubmed-43246652015-02-12 Impact of breast cancer stage, time from diagnosis and chemotherapy on plasma and cellular biomarkers of hypercoagulability Chaari, Mourad Ayadi, Ines Rousseau, Aurelie Lefkou, Eleftheria Van Dreden, Patrick Sidibe, Fatoumata Ketatni, Hela Galea, Vassiliki Khaterchi, Amir Bouzguenda, Racem Frikha, Mounir Ghorbal, Lilia Daoud, Jamel Kallel, Choumous Quinn, Martin Gligorov, Joseph Lotz, Jean Pierre Hatmi, Mohamed Elalamy, Ismail Gerotziafas, Grigoris T BMC Cancer Research Article BACKGROUND: In breast cancer patients routine thromboprophylaxis is not recommended but individualized risk assessment is encouraged. The incorporation of hypercoagulability biomarkers could increase the sensitivity of risk assessment models (RAM) to identify patients at VTE risk. To this aim we investigated the impact of cancer-related characteristics on hypercoagulability biomarkers. METHODS: Thrombin generation (TG) assessed with the Thrombogramme-Thrombinoscope®, levels of platelet derived microparticles (Pd-MP) assessed with flow cytometry, procoagulant phospholid dependent clotting time (PPL-ct) measured with a clotting assay and D-Dimers (were assessed in a cohort of 62 women with breast cancer and in 30 age matched healthy women. RESULTS: Patients showed significantly higher TG, Pd-MP, D-Dimers levels and shortened PPL-ct compared to the controls. The PPL-ct was inversely correlated with the levels of Pd-MP, which were increased in 97% of patients. TG and D-Dimers were increased in 76% and 59% of patients respectively. In any stage of the disease TG was significantly increased as compared to the controls. There was no significant difference of TG in patients with local, regional of metastatic stage. There was no significant difference in Pd-MP or Pd-MP/PS(+) between the subgroups of patients with local or regional stage of cancer. Patients with metastatic disease had significantly higher levels of Pd-MP and Pd-MP/PS(+) compared to those with regional stage. The D-Dimers increased in patients with metastatic stage. In patients on chemotherapy with less than 6 months since diagnosis TG was significantly higher compared to those on chemotherapy who diagnosed in interval > 6 months. Patients with metastatic disease had significantly higher levels of Pd-MP and D-Dimers compared to those with non-metastatic disease. CONCLUSION: In breast cancer patients the stage, the time elapsed since the diagnosis and the administration of chemotherapy are determinants of cellular and plasma hypercoagulability. The levels and the procoagulant activity of Pd-MP are interconnected with the biological activity and the overall burden of cancer. TG reflects the procoagulant properties of both breast cancer and chemotherapy in the initial period of cancer diagnosis. Thus the weighted incorporation of the biomarkers of cellular and plasma hypercoagulabilty in RAM for VTE might improve their predictive value. BioMed Central 2014-12-22 /pmc/articles/PMC4324665/ /pubmed/25535397 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-14-991 Text en © Chaari et al.; licensee BioMed Central. 2014 This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Chaari, Mourad
Ayadi, Ines
Rousseau, Aurelie
Lefkou, Eleftheria
Van Dreden, Patrick
Sidibe, Fatoumata
Ketatni, Hela
Galea, Vassiliki
Khaterchi, Amir
Bouzguenda, Racem
Frikha, Mounir
Ghorbal, Lilia
Daoud, Jamel
Kallel, Choumous
Quinn, Martin
Gligorov, Joseph
Lotz, Jean Pierre
Hatmi, Mohamed
Elalamy, Ismail
Gerotziafas, Grigoris T
Impact of breast cancer stage, time from diagnosis and chemotherapy on plasma and cellular biomarkers of hypercoagulability
title Impact of breast cancer stage, time from diagnosis and chemotherapy on plasma and cellular biomarkers of hypercoagulability
title_full Impact of breast cancer stage, time from diagnosis and chemotherapy on plasma and cellular biomarkers of hypercoagulability
title_fullStr Impact of breast cancer stage, time from diagnosis and chemotherapy on plasma and cellular biomarkers of hypercoagulability
title_full_unstemmed Impact of breast cancer stage, time from diagnosis and chemotherapy on plasma and cellular biomarkers of hypercoagulability
title_short Impact of breast cancer stage, time from diagnosis and chemotherapy on plasma and cellular biomarkers of hypercoagulability
title_sort impact of breast cancer stage, time from diagnosis and chemotherapy on plasma and cellular biomarkers of hypercoagulability
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4324665/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25535397
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2407-14-991
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