Abstract

Background:An international multi-disciplinary effort is underway to develop rigorous, new, consensus- and evidence-based classification criteria for Antiphospholipid Syndrome (APS). The methodological approach includes four phases; we have previously presented phases I and II (item generation and reduction), which resulted in 27 candidate criteria1organized in laboratory and clinical domains.Objectives:Phase III (item weighting/threshold identification) is currently underway; here we report initial Phase III case collection results.Methods:We used REDCap, a secure data system, for Phase III international case collection. The candidate criteria of 27 items at the end of Phase II was represented in a standardized case collection form. We asked international physicians interested in APS to provide and rate cases using a Likert scale (+3 to -3: highly likely to highly unlikely to be APS). Cases with higher scores (+2 or +3) were categorized as “highly likely” APS, whereas lower scores (+1 to -3) were categorized as “equivocal or unlikely” APS.Results:We collected 314 potential APS cases (mean age 43.8±14.4 years; 79% female; and 77% white) between 6/2019-8/2019 from 17 sites in Europe (47%), North America (41%), and South America (11%). Majority of cases were potential primary APS (64%); 137 were rated as “highly likely” and 177 as “equivocal or unlikely” APS. Lupus anticoagulant, antiβ2glycoprotein-I antibody IgG/M, anticardiolipin antibody IgG, arterial thrombosis, venous thromboembolism, microvascular disease, fetal loss between 16-34 weeks, severe preeclampsia, severe placental insufficiency, cardiac valve disease, and low platelet count occurred with higher frequency in the APS cases categorized as “highly likely” (Table).Conclusion:International collection of cases spanning the spectrum of “highly likely” to “equivocal or unlikely” APS provide “real world” assessment of patients being referred for APS evaluation. In next steps, proposed candidate criteria will be further refined, organized, and weighted, and a preliminary threshold for APS classification will be determined.

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