Abstract

The objective of this study was to evaluate several molecular markers of hemostasis in 84 patients with hypercoagulable state, treated with warfarin under thrombo-test (TT) monitoring; TT was expressed as percent of control (TT%). In all patients, the average values of international normalized ratio (INR) of prothrombin time (PT;PT-INR) was 1.68+/-0.49; this increase in PT-INR was not, however, significant in patients under TT% monitoring. There were no thrombotic or severe bleeding complications in these patients during a period of 2 years. Plasma levels of thrombin-antithrombin complex (TAT), plasmin-plasmin inhibitor complex (PPIC), D-dimer, and soluble fibrin monomer (sFM) were slightly increased, suggesting that anticoagulant therapy was not completely effective in our Japanese patients based on the values of TT%. Activated partial thromboplastin time, PT-INR, TT% and protein C activity were significantly correlated with the dose of warfarin; fibrinogen, activated thromboplastin, TAT, PPIC, D-dimer, sFM, protein S and thrombomodulin were not significantly correlated with the dose of warfarin. The PT-INR was negatively correlated with TT%, protein C and protein S, and the correlation between PT-INR and TT-INR was better than that between PT-INR and TT%. The range of TT% was not correlated with the plasma levels of TAT, PPIC, D-dimer or sFM, but the range of PT-INR was correlated with the plasma level of TAT, D-dimer and sFM. The percentage of TAT, D-dimer and sFM within normal range was significantly low in patients with high PT-INR. These finding showed that PT-INR is better than TT% for monitoring the anticoagulant therapy with warfarin, and that TT should be expressed as INR. The values of PT-INR should be more than 1.7 during the anticoagulant therapy with warfarin in Japanese patients with high risk of thrombosis.

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