Title of article :
Clinical significance of the FV:Q506 mutation in unselected oncology patients
Author/Authors :
Gregory A. Otterson، نويسنده , , Brian P. Monahan، نويسنده , , Nancy Harold، نويسنده , , Seth M. Steinberg، نويسنده , , James N. Frame، نويسنده , , Frederic J. Kaye، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Abstract :
Purpose
A common germline mutation in the factor V gene (FV:Q506) has been associated with hypercoagulability in families with heritable predisposition to thrombosis. We examined the prevalence and clinical significance of the FV:Q506 mutation in cancer patients.
Patients and methods
We performed a retrospective cohort study by examining 353 consecutive, unselected patients in a general hematology/oncology clinic. We ascertained risk factors, obtained the clinical clotting history, and determined the heterozygous or homozygous presence of the FV:Q506 allele for each patient.
Results
We detected a germline mutation in 5.4% (19 of 353) of patients, of whom 18 were heterozygous and 1 was homozygous for the FY-Q506 mutant allele. In 17 of 18 heterozygous patients, there was no history of venous thrombosis or catheter-associated thrombosis. These asymptomatic patients included 13 patients who had been diagnosed with cancer or leukemia for a mean of 66.2 months (median 69) and had received a variety of local and systemic treatments. In contrast, 1 of 18 heterozygous and 1 of 1 homozygous patients had developed deep vein thrombosis that was associated, respectively, with either recurrent thrombotic events or a strong family history for pulmonary embolus.
Conclusions
Routine screening for the FV:Q506 mutation in cancer patients without a personal or family history for venous thrombosis is not helpful in guiding management. In contrast, an episode of venous thrombosis in a patient with a mutant germline FV:Q506 allele was associated with recurrent thrombotic events. These findings suggest that patients heterozygous for the FV:Q506 allele may require an independent “susceptibility” element to manifest a venous hypercoagulable state. In addition, only 2 of 25 clinic patients with a venous clot carried the FV:Q506 allele suggesting this genetic defect plays a minor role in the hypercoagulable state of cancer.
Journal title :
The American Journal of Medicine
Journal title :
The American Journal of Medicine