The clinical expression of hereditary protein C and protein S deficiency:: a relation to clinical thrombotic risk-factors and to levels of protein C and protein S

1993 
We investigated 103 first-degree relatives of 13 unrelated protein C or protein S deficient patients to assess the role of additional thrombotic risk factors and of protein C and protein S levels in the clinical expression of hereditary protein C and protein S deficiency. Fifty-seven relatives were protein C (37) or protein S deficient (20). Thromboembolic events occurred in 30% of protein C deficient and in 35% of protein S deficient persons, compared with 3% and 0% in their normal controls respectively (P <0.05). In protein C deficient persons, the median thromboembolic event-free survival was 55 years, while in protein S deficiency this interval was 33 years (P = 0.047). In the protein C deficient group 64% of the initial events occurred spontaneously, as did 71% in the protein S deficient group. Recurrent thromboembolic events were more often associated with concomitant risk factors than the initial events: 64% and 50% in persons with protein C or protein S deficiency respectively. These findings suggest a substantial role for these risk factors in triggering thromboembolic events in deficient persons. Protein C antigen and protein S antigen levels were similar in symptomatic and asymptomatic deficient persons. Total, but not free, protein S antigen levels were significantly higher in symptomatic protein C deficient persons, as were protein C antigen and activity levels in symptomatic protein S deficient ones. The clinical implication of this finding is not yet clear.
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