PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Jan 2016)

Altered Hypercoagulability Factors in Patients with Chronic Chagas Disease: Potential Biomarkers of Therapeutic Response.

  • Maria-Jesus Pinazo,
  • Elizabeth de Jesus Posada,
  • Luis Izquierdo,
  • Dolors Tassies,
  • Alexandre-Ferreira Marques,
  • Elisa de Lazzari,
  • Edelweiss Aldasoro,
  • Jose Muñoz,
  • Alba Abras,
  • Silvia Tebar,
  • Montserrat Gallego,
  • Igor Correia de Almeida,
  • Joan-Carles Reverter,
  • Joaquim Gascon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0004269
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
p. e0004269

Abstract

Read online

Thromboembolic events were described in patients with Chagas disease without cardiomyopathy. We aim to confirm if there is a hypercoagulable state in these patients and to determine if there is an early normalization of hemostasis factors after antiparasitic treatment. Ninety-nine individuals from Chagas disease-endemic areas were classified in two groups: G1, with T.cruzi infection (n = 56); G2, healthy individuals (n = 43). Twenty-four hemostasis factors were measured at baseline. G1 patients treated with benznidazole were followed for 36 months, recording clinical parameters and performance of conventional serology, chemiluminescent enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (trypomastigote-derived glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored mucins), quantitative polymerase chain reaction, and hemostasis tests every 6-month visits. Prothrombin fragment 1+2 (F1+2) and endogenous thrombin potential (ETP) were abnormally expressed in 77% and 50% of infected patients at baseline but returned to and remained at normal levels shortly after treatment in 76% and 96% of cases, respectively. Plasmin-antiplasmin complexes (PAP) were altered before treatment in 32% of G1 patients but normalized in 94% of cases several months after treatment. None of the patients with normal F1+2 values during follow-up had a positive qRT-PCR result, but 3/24 patients (13%) with normal ETP values did. In a percentage of chronic T. cruzi infected patients treated with benznidazole, altered coagulation markers returned into normal levels. F1+2, ETP and PAP could be useful markers for assessing sustained response to benznidazole.