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Retrospectively diagnosed autoimmune VWF deficiency in a patient with repeated hemorrhagic events after two common colds. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Autoimmune von Willebrand factor deficiency (AiVWFD) is a rare bleeding disorder caused by anti-VWF autoantibodies, while non-immune acquired von Willebrand syndrome (AVWS) is more prevalent and often linked to different causes.
  • A case involving an 80-year-old Japanese woman highlighted the difficulty of detecting AiVWFD, as her initial tests for anti-VWF autoantibodies were negative, leading to a misdiagnosis of non-immune AVWS.
  • After 6 years, advanced testing methods revealed the presence of anti-VWF autoantibodies, suggesting the cold medicine she used might have triggered the autoimmune response and emphasizing the need for sensitive tests to diagnose AiVWFD properly.

Article Abstract

Autoimmune von Willebrand factor (VWF) deficiency (AiVWFD) caused by anti-VWF autoantibodies is a rare bleeding disorder, whereas "non-immune" acquired von Willebrand syndrome (AVWS) caused by other etiologies is more common. Therefore, only 40 patients with AiVWFD have been identified in Japan through an ongoing nationwide survey on autoimmune coagulation factor deficiencies. This may be due to the inability to efficiently detect anti-VWF antibodies, as anti-VWF antibody testing is not routine. An 80-year-old Japanese woman developed AVWS and experienced bleeding after two separate common colds. She took the same cold medicine each time and recovered spontaneously after discontinuation of the medicine. Severe VWF deficiency normalized each time. Initial immunological tests did not detect anti-VWF autoantibodies, and thus a diagnosis of "non-immune" AVWS of unknown origin was made. However, after 6 years, new ELISA assays using purified VWF proteins detected free anti-VWF autoantibodies, which led to a retrospective diagnosis of AiVWFD. It is probable that the cold medicine (and/or cold virus infection) induced the autoantibodies, as the recurrence and normalization of the same coagulation abnormality and the clinical course (including drug administration and discontinuation) were completely synchronized. If AiVWFD is suspected, highly sensitive autoantibody tests should be performed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12185-024-03782-4DOI Listing

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