Low factor XIII levels and altered fibrinolysis in patients with multiple myeloma.

Thromb Res

Department of Laboratory Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Division of Clinical Laboratory Sciences, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, Hungary; Hungarian Research Network (HUN-REN-DE) Cerebrovascular Research Group, Debrecen, Hungary. Electronic address:

Published: February 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Acquired factor FXIII deficiency can be linked to multiple myeloma (MM) and may lead to severe bleeding, but its prevalence and reasons are not well known.
  • A study compared FXIII levels and the balance of coagulation and fibrinolysis in untreated MM and monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) patients against healthy controls, finding significant differences.
  • Results indicated that MM patients exhibited lower FXIII levels due to consumption, alongside markers of hypercoagulability and ongoing fibrinolysis, suggesting disturbed hemostasis even in MGUS patients.

Article Abstract

Background: Acquired factor FXIII (FXIII) deficiency can be immune- or non-immune mediated and may cause severe bleeding symptoms. The incidence of acquired FXIII deficiency and its etiology in patients with multiple myeloma (MM) are poorly understood.

Objectives: To assess FXIII levels and the balance of fibrinolysis in newly diagnosed, untreated MM and monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) patients.

Methods: FXIII activity, mixing studies, FXIII-AB antigen, total FXIII-B antigen were measured in platelet-poor plasma from 17 untreated MM patients, 33 untreated MGUS patients, and 30 age and sex-matched healthy controls. Besides routine laboratory measurements, the balance of coagulation and fibrinolysis was evaluated using quantitative fibrin monomer (FM) test, thrombin-antithrombin assay, α2-antiplasmin activity, plasmin-α2-antiplasmin (PAP) complex, D-dimer, plasmin generation assay, clot lysis assay, and ClotPro-TPA test.

Results: FXIII-AB levels were significantly lower in MM patients compared to controls [median (IQR):14.6 (11.2-19.4) vs. 21.8 (17.1-26.4) mg/L, p = 0.0015], whereas total FXIII-B did not differ between groups. Decrease in FXIII activity was parallel to the decrease in FXIII-AB. An immune-mediated inhibitory mechanism was ruled out. Free/total FXIII-B was significantly higher in MM patients compared to MGUS and healthy controls, suggesting an etiology of FXIII-A consumption. In MM and MGUS patients, FM, D-dimer, and PAP complex were significantly elevated compared to controls, indicating hypercoagulability and ongoing fibrinolysis.

Conclusions: Low FXIII levels due to consumption were observed in MM patients at diagnosis. Hypercoagulability and ongoing fibrinolysis were detected in MM and MGUS, indicating that a disturbed hemostasis balance is already present in the latter benign condition.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.thromres.2023.12.004DOI Listing

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