A Novel LC‐MS/MS Assay for Quantification of Des‐carboxy Prothrombin and Characterization of Warfarin‐Induced Changes

Warfarin is a narrow therapeutic index anticoagulant drug and its use is associated with infrequent but significant adverse bleeding events. The international normalized ratio (INR) is the most commonly used biomarker to monitor and titrate warfarin therapy. However, INR is derived from a functional...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical and translational science 2020-07, Vol.13 (4), p.718-726
Hauptverfasser: Basit, Abdul, Prasad, Bhagwat, Estergreen, Joanne K., Sabath, Daniel E., Alade, Nathan, Veenstra, David L., Rettie, Allan E., Thummel, Kenneth E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Warfarin is a narrow therapeutic index anticoagulant drug and its use is associated with infrequent but significant adverse bleeding events. The international normalized ratio (INR) is the most commonly used biomarker to monitor and titrate warfarin therapy. However, INR is derived from a functional assay, which determines clotting efficiency at the time of measurement and is susceptible to technical variability. Protein induced by vitamin K antagonist‐II (PIVKA‐II) has been suggested as a biomarker of long‐term vitamin K status, providing mechanistic insights about variation in the functional assay. However, the currently available antibody‐based PIVKA‐II assay does not inform on the position and number of des‐carboxylation sites in prothrombin. The assay presented in this paper provides simultaneous quantification of carboxy and des‐carboxy prothrombin that are essential for monitoring early changes in INR and, thus, serves as the superior tool for managing warfarin therapy. Additionally, this assay permits the quantification of total prothrombin level, which is affected by warfarin treatment. Prothrombin recovery from plasma was 95% and the liquid chromatography‐tandem mass spectrometry (LC‐MS/MS) assay was linear (r2 = 0.98) with a dynamic range of 1–100 µg/mL. The assay interday precision was within 20%. A des‐carboxy peptide of prothrombin (GNLER) was negatively correlated with active prothrombin (Pearson r = 0.99, P 
ISSN:1752-8054
1752-8062
DOI:10.1111/cts.12757