Bleeding symptoms in patients diagnosed as type 3 von Willebrand disease

  • Alberto Tosetto
  • Zahra Badiee
  • Mohammad-Reza Baghaipour
  • Luciano Baronciani
  • Javier Battle
  • Erik Berntorp
  • Imre Bodó
  • Ulrich Budde
  • Giancarlo Castaman
  • Jeroen C J Eikenboom
  • Peyman Eshghi
  • Cosimo Ettorre
  • Anne Goodeve
  • Jenny Goudemand
  • Charles Richard Morris Hay
  • Hamid Hoorfar
  • Mehran Karimi
  • Bijan Keikhaei
  • Riitta Lassila
  • Frank W G Leebeek
  • Maria Fernanda Lopez Fernandez
  • Pier Mannuccio Mannucci
  • Maria Gabriella Mazzucconi
  • Massimo Morfini
  • Johannes Oldenburg
  • Ian Peake
  • Rafael Parra Lòpez
  • Flora Peyvandi
  • Reinhard Schneppenheim
  • Andreas Tiede
  • Gholamreza Toogeh
  • Marc Trossaert
  • Omidreza Zekavat
  • Eva M K Zetterberg
  • Augusto B Federici

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Type 3 von Willebrand's disease (VWD) patients present markedly reduced levels of von Willebrand factor and factor VIII. Because of its rarity, the bleeding phenotype of type 3 VWD is poorly described, as compared to type 1 VWD.

AIMS: To evaluate the frequency and the severity of bleeding symptoms across age and sex groups in type 3 patients and to compare these with those observed in type 1 VWD patients to investigate any possible clustering of bleeding symptoms within type 3 patients.

METHODS: We compared the bleeding phenotype and computed the bleeding score (BS) using the MCMDM-1VWD bleeding questionnaire in patients enrolled in the 3WINTERS-IPS and MCMDM-1VWD studies.

RESULTS: In 223 unrelated type 3 VWD patients, both the BS and the number of clinically relevant bleeding symptoms were increased in type 3 as compared to type 1 VWD patients (15 versus 6 and 5 versus 3). Intracranial bleeding, oral cavity, hemarthroses, and deep hematomas were at least five-fold over-represented in type 3 VWD. A more severe bleeding phenotype was evident in patients having von Willebrand factor antigen levels < 20 IU/dL at diagnosis in the two merged cohorts. In type 3 patients, there was an apparent clustering of hemarthrosis with gastrointestinal bleeding and epistaxis, whereas bleeding after surgery or tooth extraction clusters with oral bleeding and menorrhagia.

CONCLUSIONS: In the largest cohort of type 3 VWD patients, we were able to describe a distinct clinical phenotype that is associated with the presence of a more severe hemostatic defect.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1538-7933
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 09.2020
PubMed 32379400