Von Willebrand Disease (VWD) is defined as an inherited bleeding disorder that is caused by deficiency or dysfunction of von Willebrand factor (VWF), a plasma protein that mediates the initial adhesion of platelets at sites of vascular injury and also binds and stabilizes blood clotting factor VIII (FVIII) in the circulation. The most severe forms of VWD are usually easy to diagnose (obvious hemorrhagic symptoms and major VWF deficiency), whereas the mild forms of the disease are still difficult to confirm. It is indeed reported that about 1% of the population carry mild biological VWF deficiency without any bleeding tendency and any "actual disease". On the contrary, some patients with severe bleeding history can carry a true VWF abnormality, well-confirmed by genetic studies, without any VWF deficiency when evaluated with standard biological methods, such as Ristocetin Cofactor activity (VWF:RCo). However, in these patients, the use of alternative methods, such as PFA-100 (Platelet Fonction Analyzer-100), the study of Factor VIII (FVIII:C) to VWF (FVIII:C/VWF) ratio or the evaluation of VWF activity using more specialized methods such as VWF:CB (VWF-Collagen Binding) assay can detect the VWF deficiency and possible hemorrhagic predisposition. In this project, the investigators plan to assess the performance of VWF:CB in the diagnosis of VWF deficiency in patients with unexplained bleeding history.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
70
no intervention
Dijon University Hospital
Dijon, France
Nantes University Hospital
Nantes, France
Von Willebrand factor levels measured with Von Willebrand factor: Collagen-Binding methods
Deficiency is defined when VWF level is \< 50IU/dL, as usually defined by Favaloro E.J. (2000). A composite reference standard (CRS) will be used to improve the imperfect Gold Standard (VWF: RCo). CRS will be defined as being positive if either VWF: RCo, VWF:Ag, PFA-100 or FVIII:C will be positive and negative otherwise.
Time frame: Up to 1 year
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