Platelets (Jul 2021)

Investigation of fibrinogen in early bleeding of patients with newly diagnosed acute promyelocytic leukemia

  • Tiantian Chu,
  • Hong Wang,
  • Xin Lv,
  • Jiaqian Qi,
  • Yaqiong Tang,
  • Yi Fan,
  • Huiying Qiu,
  • Xiaowen Tang,
  • Chengcheng Fu,
  • Changgeng Ruan,
  • Yue Han,
  • De-Pei Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/09537104.2020.1799969
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32, no. 5
pp. 677 – 683

Abstract

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Early hemorrhagic death remains a major cause of treatment failure in acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). This study investigated the role of fibrinogen concentrations in early hemorrhage and overall survival (OS) of APL patients. Laboratory and clinical data, including fibrinogen concentrations and other coagulation indexes, bleeding events, and survival data, of 198 patients newly diagnosed with APL from February 2012 to December 2017 were extracted from patient records and retrospectively investigated. Patients with moderate/severe bleeding had significantly lower median fibrinogen concentrations (p = .023), higher Chinese disseminated intravascular coagulation scoring system (CDSS) (p 1.6 g/L (p = .015; p = .023). However, moderate/severe (p = .088) and severe bleeding rates (p = .063) were comparable for patients with fibrinogen 12.8 s (p = .005), age ≥60 years (p = .001), and CDSS ≥5 (p = .044) were independent predictors of 1-year OS. Fibrinogen ≤1.6 g/L may be an independent risk factor for early bleeding in newly treated patients with APL and is associated with a worse 1-year OS. Increasing fibrinogen to >1.6 g/L may help to prevent bleeding.

Keywords