The role of factor XIII in acute bleeding situations is gaining more and more importance. It has previously been shown that prepartum factor XIII activity has a significant impact on postpartum blood loss. Whether factor XIII antigen behaves in a similar manner is unknown. As postpartum hemorrhage is one of the leading causes of maternal morbidity and mortality worldwide and factor XIII antigen determination might be available more readily in some centers as compared to factor XIII activity, this is an important question to answer, especially in the emergency situation of a postpartum hemorrhage. To assess the correlation of prepartum factor XIII antigen with prepartum factor XIII activity and to evaluate the correlation between prepartum factor XIII antigen on measured postpartum blood loss. This is a secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study which analyzed the impact of prepartum blood coagulation factor XIII activity on postpartum blood loss in 1300 women at the University Hospital Zurich, Switzerland between October 2015 and November 2016 ("PPH-1300 study"). Blood loss was quantified using a previously validated technique. The association of factor XIII activity and factor XIII antigen was assessed by means of a Spearman rank correlation and differences were displayed using Bland-Altman plot and Passing-Bablok regression. The effect of the prepartum factor XIII antigen on blood loss was estimated by continuous outcome logistic regression. Prepartum factor XIII activity significantly correlated with prepartum factor XIII antigen (Spearman rank correlation coefficient for prepartum values 0.89, p < 0.001 and postpartum values 0.902, p < 0.001). Elevated values of prepartum factor XIII antigen showed a trend toward lower measured postpartum blood loss. The correlation of factor XIII activity with factor XIII antigen (subunit A) in a large real-world sample as well as an association of prepartum factor XIII antigen and postpartum blood loss is observed. Factor XIII antigen determination, a highly automatable test, could be useful in emergency situations such as a PPH (as well as other bleeding situations) if the determination of factor XIII activity is not possible. To evaluate whether FXIII replenishment reduces blood loss is the focus of ongoing studies.
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