Factor VIII Activity
| Factor VIII Activity | | | |
| Number | | 086264 |
| CPT | | 85240 |
| Related Information | | Collagen-Binding Activity (CBA) Profile Hemostasis and Thrombosis Appendix von Willebrand Profile |
| Synonyms | | AHF ; Antihemophilic Factor |
| Special Instructions | | If the patient's hematocrit exceeds 55%, the volume of citrate in the collection tube must be adjusted. Refer to Coagulation Collection Procedures for directions. |
| Specimen | | Plasma, frozen |
| Volume | | 2 mL |
| Minimum Volume | | 1 mL |
| Container | | Blue-top (sodium citrate) tube |
Collection | | Blood should be collected in a blue-top tube containing
3.2% buffered sodium citrate.1 Evacuated
collection tubes must be filled to completion to ensure a
proper blood to anticoagulant ratio.2,3 The
sample should be mixed immediately by gentle inversion at
least six times to ensure adequate mixing of the
anticoagulant with the blood. A discard tube is not
required prior to collection of coagulation
samples.4,5 When noncitrate tubes are collected
for other tests, collect sterile and nonadditive (red top)
tubes prior to citrate (blue top) tubes. Any tube
containing an alternate anticoagulant should be collected
after the blue-top tube. Gel-barrier tubes and serum tubes
with clot initiators should also be collected after the
citrate tubes. Centrifuge and carefully remove the plasma
using a plastic transfer pipette, being careful not to
disturb the cells. Transfer the plasma into a LabCorp PP
transpak frozen purple tube with screw cap (LabCorp
No 49482). Freeze immediately and maintain
frozen until tested. To avoid delays in turnaround time
when requesting multiple tests on frozen samples, please
submit separate frozen specimens for each test requested.
Please print and use the Specimen
Collection Bulletin as a tube-filling guide. |
| Storage Instructions | | Freeze |
| Patient Preparation | | Avoid warfarin (Coumadin®) therapy for 2 weeks and heparin therapy for 2 days prior to the test. Do not draw from an arm with a heparin lock or heparinized catheter. |
| Causes for Rejection | | Gross hemolysis; clotted specimen; frozen specimen thawed in transit; improper labeling |
| Reference Interval | | 50% to 150%. Average vWF levels (both antigen and activity) tend to vary by blood type.6 One study found the mean vWF levels by blood type to be as follows:7 - Type O: 74.8%
- Type A: 105.6%
- Type B: 116.9%
- Type AB: 123.3%
|
| Use | | Diagnosis of von Willebrand factor (vWF) deficiency6,8,9,10 |
| Limitations | | Factor VIII is an acute phase reactant and can be elevated in a number of clinical conditions. This can affect the accuracy of the test in diagnosing hemophilia. Factor VIII levels should not be used to determine the carrier status of females. Genetic testing should be used for this purpose. Factor VIII inhibitors (both autoantibodies that develop after replacement therapy and autoantibodies that develop spontaneously) can result in falsely low factor VIII levels. |
| Methodology | | Factor VII activity is determined utilizing an aPTT-based one-stage clotting time assay. Factor VIII-depleted plasma is used as the substrate and the clotting time with the patient plasma is compared to the clotting time of normal pooled plasma. |
| Additional Information | | Factor VIII is a large glycoprotein cofactor (320 kilodaltons) that is produced mainly in hepatocytes, but also to some extent by liver macrophages, megakaryocytes, and endothelial cells.6,11 Factor VIII circulates in the plasma bound to von Willebrand factor (vWF) at a concentration of approximately 0.1 mg/mL.11 The plasma half-life of factor VIII is short at about 8-10 hours.11 Factor VIII deficiency should be suspected when a patient with excessive bleeding has a normal protime (PT) and an extended activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT). Hemophilia A, or classic hemophilia, occurs as the result of congenital deficiency of factor VIII.6,7 Clinical features of hemophilia A are the same as for hemophilia B which is caused by factor IX deficiency (see Factor IX Activity [086298] ). Hemophilia A is the second most common inherited bleeding abnormality (second only to von Willebrand disease), occurring in approximately 1 of every 5000 live male births.6,7 Hemophilia A accounts for approximately 85% of all hemophilia cases.7 This condition is transmitted as an X chromosome-linked hereditary disorder.7 The majority of cases occur in men whose mothers are carriers of the genetic defect. About 30% of factor VIII deficiencies arise in men as spontaneous mutations.6,7 The prevalence of hemophilia A is equal in all ethnic groups.6,7 Female carriers of hemophilia A may rarely present with excessive bleeding.6 Hemophilia symptoms can also occur in female carriers who have a high degree of lyonization of the factor VIII alleles.7 Females with Turner syndrome karyotype XO, can also be symptomatic.7 The severity of hemophilia A can be defined by the level of factor VIII activity.7,8 Severe hemophilia, which represents approximately half the cases, is associated with a factor VIII level <1%. About 10% of cases are moderate with factor VIII levels of 1% to 5% and the remaining 30% to 40% of hemophiliacs have the mild condition with factor VIII levels above >5%. Approximately 45% of cases of hemophilia A occur as the result of a genetic inversion of intron 22 of the factor VIII gene locus.7,8 This genetic mutation results in the production of a protein that has no functional or immunologic factor VIII activity.7 Numerous deletions, point mutations, and missense mutations have also been implicated in hemophilia A.7,8 Family studies combined with genetic testing can determine if at-risk women are carriers for a hemophilia A mutation.7 Factor VIII activity levels should not be used as the method of determining carrier status because a number of clinical conditions including pregnancy, infection, or inflammation can affect activity levels.7 Patients with hemophilia A can present with any number of bleeding manifestations.6,7 Often, infants with severe hemophilia are first diagnosed during the neonatal period because of excessive bleeding after circumcision or due to cord necrosis.7 Hemophilic infants also frequently suffer from intracranial hemorrhage or scalp hematomas. Spontaneous hemarthroses, a common symptom of hemophilias, typically do not occur until the child starts walking.7,8 Hematomas can often be observed at the sites of intramuscular injections for vaccination or medication. The most common sites of spontaneous bleeding in patients with severe hemophilia involve the joints and muscles. Recurrent bleeding leads to chronic muscle injury and degeneration of the joint tissue.6,7 Gastrointestinal bleeding can occur in approximately 10% of hemophiliacs.7 Males with mild-to-moderate hemophilia and female carries may have an increased bleeding tendency, especially following surgery or trauma.8 Most individual with von Willebrand disease will have decreased factor VIII levels because the von Willebrand factor (vWF) is the carrier protein for factor VIII in plasma.6,7 Individuals with von Willebrand disease type 2 Normandy will have normal vWF ristocetin cofactor activity and low factor VIII levels due to defective factor VIII to the variant vWF molecule.7 Factor VIII levels are elevated at birth and increase during pregnancy.6 Factor VIII is an acute phase reactant with levels that rise during periods of acute stress, following surgery, and in inflammatory conditions.6 Levels can also increase as the result of strenuous exercise or the administration of several drugs including epinephrine, DDAVP, or estrogen (for birth control or hormone replacement therapy). Factor VIII levels can be elevated in a number of clinical conditions including carcinoma, leukemia, liver disease, renal disease, hemolytic anemia, diabetes mellitus, deep vein thrombosis, and myocardial infarction.6 Elevation of factor VIII above 150% is associated with an increased risk for venous thrombosis of more than fivefold.11,12 The basis for this increased risk is not well understood as genetic studies of the factor VIII and von Willebrand factor genes failed to identify a genetic basis for this increased risk.11 Values >150% are observed in 20% to 25% of individuals with venous thrombosis or thromboembolism in the absence of other known causes of factor VIII elevation.12 A syndrome of combined factor VIII and V deficiencies has been described in over 60 families in and around the Mediterranean basin.13 Hemophilia A patients receiving replacement products can develop inhibitors to factor VIII due to the production of alloantibodies.6,9 Acquired hemophilia caused by the development of autoantibodies to factor VIII can also occur.10 This rare condition (1 in 1,000,000 individuals) can following pregnancy and in elderly individual with autoimmune disorders. These patients have bleeding symptoms similar to those seen in congenital hemophilia A. |
| Footnotes | | - Adcock DM, Kressin DC, and Marlar RA, “Effect of 3.2% vs 3.8% Sodium Citrate Concentration on Routine Coagulation Testing,” Am J Clin Pathol, 1997, 107(1):105-10.
- Reneke J, Etzell J, Leslie S, et al, “Prolonged Prothrombin Time and Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time Due to Underfilled Specimen Tubes With 109 mmol/L (3.2%) Citrate Anticoagulant,” Am J Clin Pathol, 1998, 109(6):754-7.
- “National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standardization: Collection, Transport, and Processing of Blood Specimens for Coagulation Testing and General Performance of Coagulation Assays; Approved Guideline,” Third Edition, Villanova: NCCLS Document H21-A3:11(23), 1999.
- Gottfried EL and Adachi MM, “Prothrombin Time and Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time Can Be Performed on the First Tube,” Am J Clin Pathol, 1997, 107(6):681-3.
- McGlasson DL, More L, Best HA, et al, “Drawing Specimens for Coagulation Testing: Is a Second Tube Necessary?” Clin Lab Sci, 1999, 12(3):137-9.
- Adcock DM, Jensen R, Johns CS, et al, Coagulation Handbook, Esoterix Coagulation, 2002.
- Cohen AJ and Kessler CM, “Hemophilia A and B,” Consultative Hemostasis and Thrombosis, Kitchens CS, Alving BM, and Kessler CM, eds, Philadelphia, PA: WB Saunders Co, 2002, 43-56.
- Triplett DA, “Coagulation Abnormalities,” Clinical Laboratory Medicine, McClatchey KD, ed, 2nd ed, Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins, 2002, 1033-49.
- Dimichele D, “Inhibitors: Resolving Diagnostic and Therapeutic Dilemmas,” Haemophilia, 2002, 8(3):280-7.
- Boggio LN and Green D, “Acquired Hemophilia,” Rev Clin Exp Hematol, 2001, 5(4):389-404.
- Chandler WL, Rodgers GM, Sprouse JT, et al, “Elevated Hemostatic Factor Levels as Potential Risk Factors for Thrombosis,” Arch Pathol Lab Med, 2002, 126(11):1405-14.
- Kamphuisen PW, Eikenboom JC, Rosendaal FR, et al, “High Factor VIII Antigen Levels Increase the Risk of Venous Thrombosis But Are Not Associated With Polymorphisms in the von Willebrand Factor and Factor VIII Gene,” Br J Haematol, 2001, 115(1):156-8.
- Ginsburg D, Nichols WC, Zivelin A, et al, “Combined Factors V and VIII Deficiency - The Solution,” Haemophilia, 1998, 4(4):677-82
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