4.6 Article

Patient-independent variables affecting the assessment of aspirin responsiveness by serum thromboxane measurement

Journal

THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS
Volume 116, Issue 5, Pages 891-896

Publisher

SCHATTAUER GMBH-VERLAG MEDIZIN NATURWISSENSCHAFTEN
DOI: 10.1160/TH16-05-0349

Keywords

Thromboxane B-2; aspirin; cyclooxygenase-1; liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry; enzyme immunoassay

Funding

  1. Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking [115006]
  2. SUMMIT consortium
  3. Catholic University
  4. [Linea D3.2 2013-70201169]

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The serum TXB2 (sTXB(2)) assay reflects the pharmacodynamics of platelet inhibition by low-dose aspirin. However, different studies reported variable sTXB(2) values. sTXB(2) assay requires whole blood incubation at 37 degrees C as a condition for optimal thrombin generation, arachidonic acid release and its metabolism by platelet cyclooxygenase-1 to form TXA(2). Access to 37 degrees C incubation may be variably delayed, and different methods to quantitate sTXB(2) may contribute to variable results between different Centers. We investigated whether delaying 37 degrees C incubation and/or analytical issues affect sTXB(2) concentrations, biasing the assessment of aspirin responsiveness. Sixty-eight samples from 54 volunteers, on-and off-aspirin, were incubated at 37 degrees C immediately after sampling (reference sample) or after 5, 10, 15, 20, 30 or 60 minutes at room temperature (RT); 8 samples remained at RT 60 minutes, without subsequent incubation; 314 sera were measured by enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and liquid chromatography-tandem mass-spectrometry (LC/MS-MS) methods. sTXB2 concentrations decreased exponentially as a function of the delay before 37 degrees C incubation, ranging from 94 +/- 11 % at 5 minutes to 23 +/- 22 % of the reference sample after 60 minutes at RT. There was high agreement between EIA and LC/MS-MS. Moreover, we simulated the influence of a 15- or 30-minute delayed incubation on 300 sTXB2 measurements from previously-studied, aspirin-treated patients. Delayed incubation reduced the percentage of aspirin 'non-responders' by 22 % to 52 %, depending on the response threshold. In conclusion, a variable delay in the 37 degrees C incubation of blood samples may affect the assessment of platelet cyclooxygenase-1 inhibition by aspirin and confound the characterization of the determinants of aspirin responsiveness.

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