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Test ID: HIT
Heparin Induced Thrombocytopenia
Useful For

To detect antibodies against the Heparin/PF4 complex in patients on Heparin thereapy.

Method name and description

Automated.
HemosIL HIT-Ab(PF4-H) is a latex-enhanced immunoturbidimetric assay for the detection of anti-PF4-H, commonly associated with HIT. The latex reagent is a suspension of polystyrene particles, coated with a monoclonal antibody against PF4-H. The competitive agglutination reaction occurs when a complex of PF4 and PVS (polyvinyl sulfonate, a compound similar to Heparin) is mixed with the latex and patient sample. Anti-PF4-H in a positive sample will bind to the complex, thereby inhibiting agglutination, while the absence of anti-PF4-H will allow the complex to bind to the latex, thereby allowing agglutination.

Reporting name

Heparin Induced Thrombocytopenia (HIT)

Clinical information

There are two distinct type of Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) :
 1- type I HIT which is nonimmune heparin-associated thrombocytopenia (HAT). This is a common benign thrombocytopenia, characterized by a mild decrease of the platelet count, occurring early in the course of treatment with heparin, especially intravenous UFH.  It does not progress and may resolve spontaneously despite continuation of heparin therapy.
2 -Type II HIT (immune heparin-associated thrombocytopenia) caused by antibodies directed against heparin/platelet factor 4 complexes. A serious immune-mediated syndrome occurs in 1%- 5% of patients treated with UFH, with delayed onset, typically between days 5 and 10 of UFH therapy. In patients previously treated with heparin (within the preceding 3-6 months), thrombocytopenia can develop rapidly (within 24 hours) after heparin re-exposure. In Type II HIT, the platelet count typically decreases by 40% to 50% from baseline.
Immune HIT is clinically important, because of the high risk for development of  arterial or venous thrombosis.                                                                                                                                                                        

Specimen type / Specimen volume / Specimen container

Plasma Na Cit. Platelet-poor plasma. Specimen Volume: 2.7 ml. Container/Tube: Light-blue top .

Collection instructions / Special Precautions / Timing of collection
  1. Samples collected in HMC facilities MUST reach the coagulation laboratory within 1 hour of collection.
  2. Samples collected in non-HMC facilities / external clients: MUST reach coagulation laboratory within 1 hour of collection, if not applicable, centrifuge the whole blood and carefully remove the plasma (by pipette not by decanting) and send it in a temperature-controlled environment (18- 25 ºC) within 2 hours of centrifugation. If the transportation of the plasma can’t be within a maximum of 2 hours, prepare platelet-poor plasma as follows:
  • Re-centrifuge the plasma again.
  • Remove the top portion of plasma leaving approximately 250 ul in the bottom to discard.
  • The double-centrifuged plasma should be aliquoted into labeled plastic tubes.
  • Freeze immediately at -20 ºC or below
  • Specimens must arrive frozen.
  1. If patient HCT is >55%, test will not be processed. The ordering Physician will be contacted to reorder the test and call the patient to go to Phlebotomy for recollection. Instruct the patient to inform the phlebotomy   about his high HCT% , the phlebotomy will contact the lab to request a coagulation tube after adjusting amount of anticoagulant.

 

Note:

Collection of blood for coagulation testing through intravenous lines that have been previously flushed with heparin should be avoided, if possible. If the blood must be drawn through an indwelling catheter, possible heparin contamination and specimen dilution must be considered. When obtaining specimens from indwelling lines that may contain heparin, the line should be flushed with 5 mL of saline, and the first 5 mL of blood or 6-times the line volume (dead space volume of the catheter) be drawn off and not used for coagulation testing. For those specimens collected from a normal saline lock (capped off venous port) twice the dead space volume of the catheter and extension set should be discarded.

Relevant clinical information to be provided

Type of Heparin given must be clearly indicated (whether UFH or LMWH) .    

  Patient/family history of bleeding  disorder. History of anticoagulant therapy.         

 History of chronic diseases

Storage and transport instructions

Ambiant

Specimen Rejection Criteria

Specimens with no label or missing required identification
Broken, leaking or contaminated specimen
Clotted samples 
Under-filled or overfilled sample tubes.
Wrong sample container sample received
Improper specimen transport temperature (e.g. like specimens which are  needed to be sent on ice)
Old specimen (test-dependent) 
Grossly Hemolyzed sample (test-dependent)                                          

Biological reference intervals and clinical decision values

Reference range in normal /untreated population with heparin:0.0 U/mL.
On heparin treated patient samples, HemosIL HIT-Ab(PF4-H) results equal or higher than 1.0 U/mL may indicate the presence of HIT antibodies. 

Although a positive result obtained using this assay may indicate the presence of heparin-associated antibodies, a positive result DOES NOT CONFIRM the diagnosis of HIT. Some patients may have naturally occurring antibodies to PF4.

The assay results should be used with other information, including the clinical context, in forming a diagnosis.

 

Factors affecting test performance and result interpretation

HIT-Ab (PF4-H) results on the ACL TOP® Family are not affected by

  1. Hemoglobin up to 495 mg/dL,
  2. Bilirubin up to 18 mg/dL, Triglyceride up to 375 mg/dL,
  3. Rheumatoid Factor up to 1000 IU/mL,
  4. Human anti-mouse antibodies (HAMA) up to 1 µg/mL.2
Turnaround time / Days and times test performed / Specimen retention time

 TAT: 1hr