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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Bleeding symptoms at disease presentation and prediction of ensuing bleeding in inherited FVII deficiency.

M. Di MinnoA. DolceG. MarianiSter Study GroupG AuerswaldA BatorovaF BernardiG Di MinnoM. N. Di MinnoA DolceM Giansilly BalizotJ IngerslevG MarianiU Martinowitz M MorfiniM PinottiA ShapiroJf SchvedB. SørensenMariasanta Napolitano

subject

RegistrieMalePediatricsFactor VII DeficiencyInternational CooperationAsymptomatic individual030204 cardiovascular system & hematologychemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineRetrospective StudieAge FactorRegistriesYoung adultChildClinical Trials as TopicHematologyFactor VIIAge FactorsHematologyFactor VIIMiddle AgedPhenotypeTreatment OutcomeChild PreschoolFemalePresentation (obstetrics)medicine.symptomHumanAdultQuality ControlRiskmedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentHemorrhageAsymptomaticMajor bleed03 medical and health sciencesYoung AdultInternal medicinemedicineHumansRetrospective StudiesModels Statisticalbusiness.industryMinor bleedInfantRetrospective cohort studychemistryDisease PresentationRelative riskbusiness030215 immunology

description

SummaryIndividuals with inherited factor VII (FVII) deficiency display bleeding phenotypes ranging from mild to severe, with 30% of patients having always been asymptomatic (non-bleeding). In 626 FVII-deficient individuals, by analysing data from the International Factor VII (IF7) Registry and the Seven Treatment Evaluation Registry (STER), we determined whether bleeding type at disease presentation and FVII coagulant activity (FVIIc) predict ensuing bleeds. At disease presentation/diagnosis, 272 (43.5%) individuals were non-bleeding, 277 (44.2%) had minor bleeds, and 77 (12.3%) had major bleeds. During a median nine-year index period (IP) observation, 87.9% of non-bleeding individuals at presentation remained asymptomatic, 75.1% of minor-bleeders had new minor bleeds, and 83.1% of major-bleeders experienced new major bleeds. After adjusting for FVIIc levels and other clinical and demographic variables, the relative risk (RR) for ensuing bleedings during the IP was 6.02 (p <0.001) and 5.87 (p <0.001) in individuals presenting with major and minor bleeds, respectively. Conversely, compared to non-bleeding individuals, a 10.95 (p = 0.001) and 28.21 (p <0.001) RR for major bleedings during the IP was found in those with minor and with major bleeds at presentation, respectively. In conclusion, in FVII deficiency, the first major bleeding symptom is an independent predictor of the risk of subsequent major bleeds.

10.1160/th12-10-0740https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23571462