Vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia
From IDWiki
Background
- Very rare
Clinical Presentation
- Follows recent vaccination within 4 to 30 days
- Can present with severe headache, visual changes, abdominal pain, nause and vomiting, back pain, dyspnea, leg pain or swelling, petechiae and easy bruising
Investigations
- CBC with platelet count and peripheral smear
- Imaging tor thrombosis based on the patient's signs and symptoms
- PF4-ELISA HIT assay, drawn before starting treatment, which is almost always positive with optical density greater than 2
- Fibrinogen, which is often low
- D-dimer, which is usually markedly elevated
Diagnosis
- All four criteria must be met:
- Recent COVID vaccine within 4 to 30 days previously
- So far only Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca
- Thrombosis, often cerebral or abdominal
- Thrombocytopenia, though they may be normal early in the course of illness
- Positive PF4 HIT ELISA
- Recent COVID vaccine within 4 to 30 days previously
Management
- Should be started if there are signs or symptoms of serious thrombosis and positive imaging or low platelets
- Treated similarly to heparin-induced thrombocytopenia
- IVIg 1 g/kg daily for 2 days
- Non-heparin anticoagulation, such as argatroban, bivalrudin, DOACs, fondaparinux, or danaparoid
- Thrombocytopenia or low fibrinogen are not absolute contraindications to anticoagulation, especially if platelets are >20 or rising
- Avoid platelet transfusions, unless serious or life-threatening bleeding