Thoracic Research and Practice
ORIGINAL INVESTIGATIONS

Inherited Thrombophilic Risk Factors in Venous Thromboembolism: Factor V Leiden and Prothrombin 20210 A

1.

Department of Pulmonary Medicine, İstanbul University, İstanbul School of Medicine, İstanbul, Turkey

2.

Department of Chest Diseases, İstanbul University, İstanbul School of Medicine, İstanbul, Turkey

3.

Department of Pulmonary Diseases, Istanbul University, Istanbul Faculty of Medicine, Istanbul, Turkey

4.

Department of Pulmonology, Koç University Hospital, İstanbul, Turkey

5.

Department of Genetics, Istanbul University, Institute for Experimental Medical Research, Istanbul, Turkey

6.

Department of Public Health, İstanbul University, İstanbul Faculty of Medicine, İstanbul, Turkey

7.

Surgery Clinic, Kartal Education and Research Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey

Thorac Res Pract 2004; 5: Turkish Respiratory Journal 82-85
Read: 702 Downloads: 279 Published: 11 October 2021

This case-control study was designed to investigate the prevalence of mutations in the prothrombin gene (20210A) and the factor V Leiden in unselected patients with venous thromboembolism (VTE). One hundred consecutive patients with objectively docu­mented VTE (49 isolated pulmonary embolism, 45 pulmonary em­bolism + deep vein thrombosis, and 6 deep vein thrombosis) and 256 unmatched control subjects were included in the study. Seven percent of the 100 patients were found to be carriers of the prothrombin 20210A allele. This mutation was present in 2.3 % of the 256 controls (Odds ratio 3.13; 95% CI 1.02 - 9.57) (p=0.05). Twenty-four percent of the patients had the mutation of factor V Leiden while this mutation was present in 9.8 % of the 132 cont­rols (OR:2.89; 95% CI 1.38 - 6.02) (p=0.006). Six patients were homozygous carriers of the factor V Leiden mutation and 4 patients shared both mutations. Patients with isolated pulmonary embolism (n=49) and patients with pulmonary embolism + deep vein throm­bosis (n=45) showed similar prevalences for factor V Leiden muta­tion (24.4% and 17.8% respectively) and for prothrombin 20210A allele (8.1% and 4-4% respectively ). It was concluded that the 20210A allele of the prothrombin gene and factor V Leiden mutation are significantly higher in Turkish patients with VTE.

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EISSN 2979-9139