High‐dose IVIG plus cangrelor platelet “anesthesia” during urgent heparin‐CPB in a patient with recent SRA‐negative HIT‐thrombosis with persisting platelet‐activating antibodies Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • In a high-risk patient with subacute heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) type A (platelet count recovery following acute HIT but with persisting platelet-activating antibodies), in whom urgent cardiac surgery was required, a key clinical question arose: could intraoperative heparin be given safely with "platelet anesthesia" provided with high-dose intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) plus cangrelor (ultra-short-acting antiplatelet agent)? This approach proved successful, without unexpected postoperative thrombocytopenia or thromboembolism. In vitro studies confirmed that both IVIG and cangrelor contributed to perioperative inhibition of HIT antibody-induced platelet activation. Interestingly, despite the patient testing strongly positive in 4 HIT immunoassays (latex immunoturbidimetric assay and 3 enzyme-immunoassays), the serotonin-release assay (SRA) was consistently negative. Nevertheless, platelet-activating HIT antibodies were detectable using modified (platelet factor 4-enhanced) SRA. Our protocol of heparin rechallenge following IVIG/cangrelor provides both intraoperative and early postoperative inhibition of HIT antibody-induced platelet activation and is applicable to patients with circulating functional HIT antibodies requiring urgent heart surgery, including those with "SRA-negative HIT."

publication date

  • August 2020