Abstract
IntroductionRistocetin cofactor activity of Von Willebrand factor (VWF:RCo) and the ratio VWF:RCo to its antigen VWF:Ag are used as routine screening to estimate VWF function and to detect types of Von Willebrand disease (VWD) caused by loss of high molecular weight multimers. However, the VWF:RCo test is prone to analytic imprecisions due to various reasons. We compared an assay for VWF activity (VWF:Ac) with VWF:RCo putting emphasis on the ratios to VWF:Ag. Materials and MethodsWe evaluated 942 samples from 432 patients and evaluated three groups in detail: normal patients (normal multimers, VWF:Ag and VWF:RCo >0.5 U/ml, VWD type 1 excluded; n=258), VWD type 1 (n=76) and acquired Von Willebrand syndrome (AVWS, n=326). In addition, 30 healthy subjects were analysed. ResultsVWF:Ac and VWF:RCo correlated well (Pearson´s r=0.96, p<0.01), so did their ratios to VWF:Ag (Pearson´s r=0.82, p<0.01). We calculated the normal range of VWF:Ac/VWF:Ag for healthy subjects as 0.8-1.16. In comparison, the reference range (mean±2std) derived from normal patient samples was 0.73-1.14. The corresponding ranges for VWF:RCo/VWF:Ag came to 0.74-1.23 (healthy) and 0.62-1.25 (normal patients). The ratios showed similar results regarding VWD type 1. The sensitivity for AVWS was higher with VWF:Ac/VWF:Ag than with VWF:RCo/VWF:Ag (97.5% versus 84.7%). ConclusionsThe data suggest that the results obtained with the VWF:Ac assay are comparable to that of the VWF:RCo assay. An AVWS was more reliably detected by VWF:Ac/VWF:Ag. We assume that the VWF:Ac assay could replace VWF:RCo for routine screening for AVWS, especially when prompt evaluation is required.
Published Version
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