Activated protein C resistance test
The activated protein C resistance 'test' is a coagulation test used in the evaluation and diagnosis of activated protein C resistance, a form of hypercoagulability. Hereditary APC resistance is usually caused by the factor V Leiden mutation, whereas acquired APC resistance has been linked to antiphospholipid antibodies, pregnancy, and estrogen therapy. APC resistance can be measured using either an activated partial thromboplastin time -based test or an endogenous thrombin potential -based test.
Methodology
The aPTT-based APC resistance test involves a modified aPTT test performed in the presence and absence of activated protein C. The ratio of these aPTT values is calculated and is called the APC sensitivity ratio or simply APC ratio. This ratio is inversely related to the degree of APC resistance. The ETP-based APC resistance test involves the addition of APC to a thrombin generation assay. This results in an inhibition of thrombin generation as measured by reduction of the endogenous thrombin potential. The result is expressed as a normalized APC sensitivity ratio, which corresponds to the ratio of the ETP measured in the presence and absence of APC divided by the same ratio in reference plasma. nAPCsr values range from 0 to 10. Opposite to the case of the APCsr with the aPTT-based APC resistance test, higher nAPCsr values indicate greater APC resistance. This is the result of the fact that APC prolongs the aPTT but inhibits thrombin generation.Whereas the aPTT-based APC resistance test only measures the initiation phase of coagulation, the ETP-based test is a global assay and measures the initiation, propagation, and termination phases of coagulation. The initiation phase accounts for less than 5% of total thrombin generation, making aPTT-based tests poorly indicative of hypercoagulability in general. The aPTT-based assay is more sensitive to levels of prothrombin and factor VIII, whereas the ETP-based test is more sensitive to levels of tissue factor pathway inhibitor and protein S. The ETP-based test has traditionally been performed using methods such as the calibrated automated thrombogram and has been limitedly available due to its technical difficulty. Recently however, a fully automated commercial test system called the ST Genesia has been introduced, and it has been said that this should allow for adoption of TGAs and ETP-based APC resistance tests in routine clinical settings.