Hemodialysis Does Not Induce Detectable Activation of the Contact System of Coagulation
Karlien François, Christelle Orlando, Kristin Jochmans, Wilfried Cools, Vicky De Meyer, Christian Tielemans, Karl Martin Wissing
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Systemic anticoagulation is administered during hemodialysis to prevent clotting of the extracorporeal circuit. The role of contact system activation in thrombin generation during hemodialysis using current era dialyzer membranes is unknown. METHODS: We performed a single-center randomized crossover study. Ten patients treated with hemodialysis underwent 3 standardized hemodialysis sessions. For every patient, each session was performed with a different type of dialyzer membrane (polyphenylene [PP], polymethylmetacrylate [PMMA], polyethylenimine-coated polyacrylonitrile [AN69ST]). Blood samples were collected before and 5, 15, 30, 90, and 240 minutes after blood pump start to evaluate coagulation activation (thrombin-antithrombin complex [TAT], prothrombin fragment 1+2 [PF1+2], activated factor XII [FXIIa], kallikrein, activated factor XI [FXIa]). Plasma of healthy volunteers (n = 20) was used as a reference. RESULTS: = 0.001). Levels of all contact system markers remained unchanged during hemodialysis with all types of dialyzer membranes. CONCLUSION: Routine hemodialysis using systemic heparin anticoagulation induces coagulation activation without measurable contact system activation.