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Endothelial dysfunction and thromboembolism in children, adolescents, and young adults with acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Liv Andrés-JensenKathrine GrellCecilie Utke RankBirgitte Klug AlbertsenRuta TuckuvieneRikke Linnemann NielsenLine Stensig LynggaardKirsten Brunswig JarvisPetter Quist-PaulsenSonata Saulyte TrakymieneRūta SemaškevičienėKadri SaksOlafur Gisli JonssonThomas Leth FrandsenPär Ingemar JohanssonKjeld Schmiegelow
Published in: Leukemia (2021)
Endothelial dysfunction has not previously been investigated as a thrombogenic risk factor among patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), known to be at high risk of thromboembolism. We retrospectively explored the association between three circulating biomarkers of endothelial dysfunction (thrombomodulin, syndecan-1, VEGFR-1) measured in prospectively collected blood samples and risk of thromboembolism in 55 cases and 165 time-matched controls, treated according to the NOPHO ALL2008 protocol. In age-, sex-, and risk group-adjusted analysis, increasing levels of thrombomodulin and VEGFR-1 were independently associated with increased odds of developing thromboembolism (OR 1.37 per 1 ng/mL [95% CI 1.20‒1.56, P < 0.0001] and OR 1.21 per 100 pg/mL [95% CI 1.02‒1.21, P = 0.005], respectively). These associations remained significant when including only samples drawn >30 days before thromboembolic diagnosis. Thrombomodulin levels were on average 3.2 ng/mL (95% CI 2.6-8.2 ng/mL) higher in samples with measurable asparaginase activity (P < 0.0001). Among single nucleotide variants located in or neighboring coding genes for the three biomarkers, none were significantly associated with odds of thromboembolism. If results are validated in another cohort, thrombomodulin and VEGFR-1 could serve as predictive biomarkers, identifying patients in need of preemptive antithrombotic prophylaxis.
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