1. Academic Validation
  2. Molecular pathology and immunology of factor VIII (hemophilia A and factor VIII inhibitors)

Molecular pathology and immunology of factor VIII (hemophilia A and factor VIII inhibitors)

  • Hum Pathol. 1987 Feb;18(2):153-61. doi: 10.1016/s0046-8177(87)80333-7.
L W Hoyer
Abstract

Factor VIII is a large procoagulant glycoprotein that circulates in plasma in a noncovalent complex with von Willebrand factor. It is essential for the efficient cleavage of coagulation factor X by factor IXa, and its absence causes a severe bleeding disorder. Plasma Factor VIII is reduced from the normal range of approximately 100 to 200 ng/ml in patients with the hereditary coagulation defect, hemophilia A, as well as in patients who develop autoantibodies that inactivate Factor VIII. The understanding of Factor VIII structure has been enhanced by recent studies that have characterized the X chromosome gene responsible for its synthesis, and preliminary information is now available about specific genetic defects. The basis for antibody formation in approximately 15 per cent of repeatedly transfused hemophilic patients is less clear at this time, however, for these individuals appear to have a variety of genetic defects that are not characteristically different from the patients who do not develop inhibitors. Although the Antibodies cause a serious problem for affected individuals, they have been very useful in characterizing normal Factor VIII and nonfunctional factor VIII-like protein that is found in the plasmas of 10 per cent of patients with mild hemophilia. Moreover, they are very useful reagents that can be used for immunoassay of Factor VIII that has been modified in ways that have destroyed its procoagulant function.

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