Summary
It was the objective of this study to obtain best estimates of the prevalence of anti-PF4/heparin
antibodies in patients not suspected to have clinical heparin-induced thrombocytopenia
(HIT) prior to undergoing cardiac surgery and to determine whether preoperative antibody
status and antibody class is predictive of postoperative thromboembolic outcomes,
non-thromboembolic outcomes, length of stay, and mortality. PubMed and EMBASE online
databases were searched up to July 2011, and we included studies involving adults
undergoing cardiac surgery examining the relationship between preoperative anti-PF4/heparin
antibodies (ELISA) and postoperative clinical outcomes. Five studies involving a combined
total of 2,332 patients met our inclusion criteria. Preoperative anti-PF4/heparin
antibodies were detected in 5–22% of patients. No study demonstrated an association
between preoperative anti-PF4/heparin antibodies and postoperative thromboembolic
outcomes or mortality. Three studies demonstrated a statistically significant association
between preoperative anti-PF4/heparin antibodies and length of stay while two showed
an association with non-thromboembolic complications. In the one study that examined
outcomes by anti-PF4/heparin antibody class, IgM antibodies predicted non-thromboembolic
complications and length-of-stay. None of the studies reported prior heparin exposure,
and most studies did not examine the relationship of the absolute value of antibody
titres (ELISA OD) and risk, nor the incidence of true/clinical HIT in preoperative
positive or negative patients. In conclusion, pre-formed anti-PF4/heparin antibodies
are common in patients undergoing cardiac surgery, but the available literature does
not support that they predict postoperative thromboembolic complications or death.
There does appear to be an association between anti-PF4/heparin antibodies and non-thromboembolic
adverse events, but a causal relationship is unlikely.
Keywords
Heparin - anti-PF4/H - antibodies - cardiac surgery