Abstract

IntroductionHeparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia (HIT) is a rare but serious immune-mediated complication of heparin treatment. HIT is characterized by an acute, transient prothrombotic state combined with thrombocytopenia and is caused by platelet-activating IgG antibodies that bind to complexes of heparin and platelet factor 4. The diagnosis of HIT relies on clinical presentation and the demonstration of HIT antibodies. One approach to improve the efficacy of laboratory analysis is to use a diagnostic algorithm. AimTo evaluate one diagnostic algorithm for HIT where the 4 T's clinical risk score is combined with immunochemical and/or functional assays. Materials and methodsThe quality of the diagnostic algorithm was retrospectively evaluated in 101 patients with suspected HIT. Laboratory results obtained from the diagnostic algorithm were compared to Heparin-Induced Platelet Aggregation (HIPA) and clinico-pathological evaluation of patients' medical records. ResultsWe found that the algorithm had a diagnostic efficacy of 94%, with specificity of 94% and sensitivity 94%. Positive likelihood ratio (LR+) was 16.0, and the negative likelihood ratio (LR−) 15.5. The efficacy of PaGIA (n=95) was 0.46, and IgG-specific HPF4-abELISA (n=54) was 0.87. ConclusionsThe diagnostic algorithm for HIT is sufficiently accurate and leads to in overall faster results and decreased cost of analysis. The weakest link of the algorithm is the risk of miscalculated 4T's scores, which is inevitably exacerbated by the insufficient experience most clinicians have with HIT. This highlights the importance of clear instructions from the laboratory and coagulation clinic.

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