Microfluidic assay of hemophilic blood clotting: distinct deficits in platelet and fibrin deposition at low factor levels

J Thromb Haemost. 2014 Feb;12(2):147-58. doi: 10.1111/jth.12457.

Abstract

Background: Coagulation factor deficiencies create a range of bleeding phenotypes. Microfluidic devices offer controlled hemodynamics and defined procoagulant triggers for measurement of clotting under flow.

Objectives: We tested a flow assay of contact pathway-triggered clotting to quantify platelet and fibrin deposition distal of dysfunctional thrombin production. Microfluidic metrics were then compared with PTT or % factor activity assays.

Methods: Whole blood (WB) treated with low level corn trypsin inhibitor (4 μg mL⁻¹) from nine healthy donors and 27 patients (deficient in factor [F] VIII, 19 patients; FIX, one patient; FXI, one patient; VWF, six patients) was perfused over fibrillar collagen at wall shear rate = 100 s⁻¹.

Results: Using healthy WB, platelets deposited within 30 s, while fibrin appeared within 6 min. Compared with healthy controls, WB from patients displayed a 50% reduction in platelet deposition only at < 1% factor activity. In contrast, striking defects in fibrin deposition occurred for patients with < 13% factor activity (or PTT > 40 s). Full occlusion of the 60-μm high channel was completely absent over the 15-min test in patients with < 1% factor activity, while an intermediate defect was present in patients with > 1% factor.

Conclusion: Spontaneous bleeding in patients with < 1% factor activity may be linked to deficits in both platelet and fibrin deposition, a risk known to be mitigated when factor levels are raised to > 1% activity (PTT of ~40-60 s), a level that does not necessarily rescue fibrin formation under flow.

Keywords: blood coagulation; hemophilia; hemostasis; microfluidics; platelets.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Blood Coagulation*
  • Blood Platelets / metabolism*
  • Fibrin / metabolism*
  • Hemophilia A / physiopathology*
  • Humans
  • Microfluidics / methods*

Substances

  • Fibrin