Litcius/Paper detail

Three Cases of Unprovoked Venous Thromboembolism with Prothrombin p.Arg596Gln Variant and a Literature Review of Antithrombin Resistance

Akihiro Tsuji, Toshiyuki Miyata, Akihiro Sekine, Reiko Neki, Koichi Kokame, Tsutomu Tomita, Yumi Kashima, Ryotaro Asano, Jin Ueda, Tatsuo Aoki, Takeshi Ogo

2022Internal Medicine10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Antithrombin resistance (ATR) is a newly identified strong genetic predisposition to venous thromboembolism (VTE) caused by genetic variations in prothrombin with substitutions of Arg at position 596 with either Leu, Gln, or Trp. In the present report, we identified a missense variant p.Arg596Gln in 3 patients from 2 families with unprovoked VTE who each experienced their first VTE event at 19, 67, and 19 years old. The three patients did not show any positive markers for thrombophilia on routine testing, suggesting that patients with unprovoked VTE who have negative findings on thrombophilia tests may carry a prothrombin variant with ATR.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineThrombophiliaMissense mutationAntithrombinVenous thromboembolismAntithrombin III deficiencyInternal medicineGenetic testingGenetic variantsVenous thrombosisFactor V LeidenGastroenterologyThrombosisGeneticsMutationGenotypeGeneHeparinBiologyBlood Coagulation and Thrombosis MechanismsVenous Thromboembolism Diagnosis and Management