Background: Epidemiologic studies have shown that asthmatic patients, in particular those with severe disease, have increased risk of pulmonary embolism. It is unknown whether these patients have a prothrombotic state under stable conditions.
Objective: We sought to compare coagulation and fibrinolysis parameters between healthy subjects and patients with mild, severe, and prednisolone-dependent asthma under stable conditions and to investigate whether hemostatic markers correlate with airway inflammation.
Methods: In 126 adults (33 healthy control subjects, 31 patients with mild asthma, 32 patients with severe asthma, and 30 patients with prednisolone-dependent asthma) parameters of inflammation (peripheral blood eosinophils and neutrophils) and markers of hemostasis (endogenous thrombin potential [ETP], thrombin-antithrombin complex, plasmin-α2-antiplasmin complex, plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 [PAI-1], D-dimer, and von Willebrand factor [vWF]) were measured in plasma. One-way ANOVA with the post hoc Bonferroni test was used for group comparison, and linear regression analysis was used for correlations.
Results: We observed increased ETP (121% vs 99%, overall P < .01), plasmin-α2-antiplasmin complex (520 vs 409 μg/L, overall P = .04), PAI-1 (10 vs 7 ng/mL, overall P = .02), and vWF (142% vs 87%, overall P < .01) levels in asthmatic patients compared with healthy control subjects. ETP, PAI-1, and vWF levels increased with increasing asthma severity. In addition, we found a correlation between ETP and vWF with neutrophil but not eosinophil counts.
Conclusion: Asthmatic patients have a prothrombotic state that increases with asthma severity. This might explain why patients with asthma, in particular those with severe disease, have an increased risk of venous thromboembolism.
Keywords: Asthma; airway inflammation; coagulation; comorbidity; fibrinolysis; hemostasis; severity.
Copyright © 2015 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.