Antiphospholipid Patients Admitted in the Intensive Care Unit: What Must The Rheumatologist Know?

Quentin Moyon, Alexis Mathian, Matthias Papo,Alain Combes, Zahir Amoura,Marc Pineton de Chambrun

Current Rheumatology Reports(2024)

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摘要
Antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) is a rare systemic autoimmune disorder that can escalate into a 'thrombotic storm' called the catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome (CAPS), frequently requiring ICU admission for multiple organ failure. This review aims to offer insight and recent evidence on critically-ill APS patients. The CAPS classification criteria define this condition as the involvement of at least three organs/systems/tissues within less than a week, caused by small vessel thrombosis, in patients with elevated antiphospholipid antibodies levels. These criteria do not encompass the full spectrum of critically-ill thrombotic APS patients and they need to be cautiously used for the bedside diagnosis of CAPS. Thrombocytopenia is the laboratory hallmark of CAPS, sometimes dropping below 20G/L, but a complete thrombotic microangiopathy pattern is infrequent. Anticoagulation is the pivotal treatment for APS and CAPS, associated with improved outcome. Triple therapy – the combination of anticoagulation, high-dose corticosteroids, and either plasma exchange or intravenous immunoglobulins – remains the standard treatment for CAPS patients. Eculizumab, an anti-C5 monoclonal antibody, may be useful in refractory patients. Despite significant progress, CAPS mortality rate remains high. Its diagnosis and management are complex, requiring a close multidisciplinary cross talk between APS specialists and intensivists.
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关键词
antiphospholipid syndrome,Catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome,Antiphospholipid antibodies,Lupus anticoagulant,Triple therapy
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