Antiphospholipid Antibody Syndrome (APLA / APS)

Antiphospholipid antibody syndrome (APS) is a systemic autoimmune thrombophilia characterized by:

  1. Arterial and/or venous thrombosis
  2. Pregnancy morbidity
  3. Presence of persistent antiphospholipid antibodies (aPLs)

Types of Antiphospholipid Antibodies

The antibodies are directed against phospholipid-binding proteins, not phospholipid itself.

Major pathogenic antibodies:

Antibody

Importance

Lupus anticoagulant (LA)

Highest thrombosis risk

Anticardiolipin antibody (aCL)

Most commonly tested

Anti-β2 glycoprotein I

Highly specific

Pathophysiology

APS is a hypercoagulable autoimmune state.

Core Mechanism

aPL antibodies bind:β2-glycoprotein-I,prothrombin,endothelial surfaces,platelets

This leads to:

  • endothelial activation
  • platelet activation
  • complement activation
  • tissue factor expression
  • impaired fibrinolysis
  • Inhibition of Natural Anticoagulants
  • thrombosis

Risk Factors for Clinical APS

Not everyone with antibodies develops disease.

“Second-hit hypothesis”:

  • antibodies create thrombophilic tendency
  • trigger precipitates thrombosis

Triggers:

  • surgery
  • infection
  • pregnancy
  • immobility
  • estrogen therapy
  • smoking
  • malignancy

Classification

1. Primary APS

APS without another autoimmune disorder.

2. Secondary APS

Associated with:

  • Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
  • Sjögren syndrome
  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Mixed connective tissue disease
  • autoimmune diseases
  • infections
  • malignancy

3. Catastrophic APS (CAPS)

Fulminant APS with:

  • widespread microvascular thrombosis
  • multiorgan failure
  • very high mortality

Clinical Features

APS manifestations are extremely diverse.

A. THROMBOTIC MANIFESTATIONS

-Venous Thrombosis (Most common)

  • Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT)
  • Pulmonary Embolism
  • Unusual Venous Thrombosis
  • APS strongly associated with thrombosis at unusual sites:

Site

Examples

Cerebral venous

CVST

Hepatic

Budd-Chiari syndrome

Portal vein

Portal thrombosis

Retinal vein

Vision loss

Renal vein

Renal infarct

B. ARTERIAL THROMBOSIS

  • Stroke-Common in young adults.
  • TIA
  • Myocardial Infarction
  • Limb Ischemia

C. OBSTETRIC APS

Classic feature.

Pregnancy Manifestations

1. Recurrent Early Miscarriages

≥3 consecutive miscarriages before 10 weeks

2. Fetal Death

≥1 unexplained fetal death after 10 weeks

3. Premature Birth

Before 34 weeks due to:

  • severe preeclampsia
  • placental insufficiency
  • eclampsia

Mechanism of Pregnancy Loss

Not only thrombosis.

Also:

  • complement-mediated placental injury
  • trophoblast dysfunction
  • placental infarction

D. HEMATOLOGIC FEATURES

Thrombocytopenia

Usually mild.

Important:thrombosis risk still high despite low platelets

Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia


Livedo Reticularis

Mottled violaceous skin pattern.

Highly suggestive of APS.


E. NEUROLOGIC FEATURES

Manifestation

Notes

Stroke

Common

TIA

Common

Migraine

Frequent

Seizures

Due to ischemia

Chorea

Rare

Cognitive dysfunction

Chronic ischemia

Transverse myelitis

Rare

F. CARDIAC MANIFESTATIONS

Libman-Sacks Endocarditis

Sterile valvular vegetations.

Most commonly:mitral valve

Other cardiac manifestations:

  • valvular thickening
  • coronary thrombosis
  • pulmonary hypertension

G. RENAL APS

  • renal artery thrombosis
  • renal vein thrombosis
  • APS nephropathy
  • hypertension
  • proteinuria
  • CKD

H. PULMONARY MANIFESTATIONS

  • pulmonary embolism
  • pulmonary hypertension
  • diffuse alveolar hemorrhage
  • ARDS in catastrophic APS

I. GASTROINTESTINAL / HEPATIC

  • mesenteric ischemia
  • hepatic vein thrombosis
  • Budd-Chiari syndrome
  • splenic infarction

J. ADRENAL APS

Adrenal vein thrombosis may cause:

  • bilateral adrenal hemorrhage
  • adrenal insufficiency

Diagnostic Criteria (Revised Sapporo / Sydney Criteria)

Need:≥1 clinical criterion   AND ≥1 laboratory criterion

Clinical Criteria

1. Vascular Thrombosis

One or more episodes of:arterial thrombosis/venous thrombosis/small vessel thrombosis confirmed objectively.


2. Pregnancy Morbidity

Any one:

  • ≥3 unexplained miscarriages <10 weeks
  • ≥1 fetal death >10 weeks
  • premature birth <34 weeks due to placental disease

Laboratory Criteria

Positive on TWO occasions ≥12 weeks apart:

Test

Criteria

Lupus anticoagulant

Positive

Anticardiolipin IgG/IgM

Medium/high titer

Anti-β2 glycoprotein-I

Positive

Triple Positivity

Positive:LA+aCL+anti-β2GPI = highest thrombosis risk.

False Positive aPL

Seen in:

  • infections
  • HIV
  • hepatitis C
  • syphilis
  • drugs

Hence persistence ≥12 weeks required.


Differential Diagnosis

Condition

Difference

Inherited thrombophilia

No aPL

DIC

Consumptive coagulopathy

TTP

Severe MAHA

HUS

Renal predominant

HIT

Heparin exposure

Vasculitis

Inflammatory vessel damage

APS and SLE

APS occurs in:

  • 20–40% of lupus patients with aPL positivity

High-risk features:

  • lupus anticoagulant
  • triple positivity

Imaging in APS

Depends on organ involved. Examples:

  • Doppler for DVT
  • CTPA for PE
  • MRI brain for stroke
  • Echo for Libman-Sacks
  • CT abdomen for visceral thrombosis

PHARMACOLOGICAL MANAGEMENT

I. MANAGEMENT OF ACUTE THROMBOSIS IN APS

A. Acute Venous Thromboembolism (DVT/PE)

1. Unfractionated Heparin (UFH)

Feature

Details

Dose

IV bolus 80 units/kg then infusion 18 units/kg/hr

Monitoring

aPTT or anti-Xa

Preferred in

Renal failure, ICU, peri-procedural settings

2. Low Molecular Weight Heparin (LMWH)

Enoxaparin

Dose

1 mg/kg SC BD OR 1.5 mg/kg OD

Renal adjustment

Needed if CrCl <30

Advantages

Predictable kinetics

Preferred in

Stable patients, pregnancy

Dalteparin

| Dose | 100 IU/kg BD OR 200 IU/kg OD |


Transition to Oral Anticoagulation

Warfarin

Feature

Details

Start

Usually overlap with heparin

Overlap duration

Minimum 5 days AND until INR therapeutic for ≥24 hr

Target INR

2–3 for first venous thrombosis

Duration

Usually lifelong in definite thrombotic APS

Why lifelong?

APS has:

  • High recurrence risk
  • Recurrent thrombosis even years later


If Recurrent Venous Thrombosis Despite INR 2–3

Options:

  1. Increase INR target to 3–4
  2. Add low-dose aspirin
  3. Switch to LMWH


B. Acute Arterial Thrombosis

Examples:

  • Stroke
  • TIA
  • MI
  • Limb ischemia

Treatment:

  1. Acute standard arterial thrombosis management
  2. Long-term APS-specific anticoagulation

Acute Phase

May include:

  • Heparin
  • Antiplatelet therapy
  • Revascularization if indicated

Long-term Therapy

Warfarin

Options

Scenario

INR Target

First arterial thrombosis

2–3 or 3–4

Recurrent arterial thrombosis

3–4

Arterial thrombosis despite INR 2–3

Add aspirin


Aspirin

Dose-75–100 mg/day

Used:

  • Along with warfarin in arterial APS
  • Recurrent thrombosis
  • High-risk APS


III. DIRECT ORAL ANTICOAGULANTS (DOACs)

Current major guidelines generally:

  • DO NOT recommend DOACs in high-risk APS

Especially avoid in:

  • Triple-positive APS
  • Arterial thrombosis
  • Recurrent thrombosis
  • Catastrophic APS

Reason:Higher recurrent thrombosis rates (especially arterial) compared with warfarin.


When DOACs MAY be considered

Possible only in:

  • Low-risk venous APS
  • Single/double antibody positivity
  • Unable to maintain INR
  • Cannot take warfarin

Even here:

  • Shared decision-making required


IV. PRIMARY THROMBOPROPHYLAXIS

(Positive antibodies but NO thrombosis)

Management depends on risk profile.

A. Low-risk Asymptomatic aPL-positive Patients

Usually:No anticoagulation

Risk factor modification:

  • Stop smoking
  • Control HTN/DM
  • Avoid estrogen OCPs
  • Weight reduction


B. High-risk aPL-positive Patients

High-risk profile:

  • Triple positivity
  • Persistent lupus anticoagulant
  • SLE with aPL
  • Strong antibody titers

Aspirin

Dose-75–100 mg/day

May reduce first thrombotic event risk.


C. SLE-associated APS Prevention

Hydroxychloroquine

Dose->200–400 mg/day

Benefits:

  • Antithrombotic
  • Reduces platelet activation
  • May reduce aPL-mediated thrombosis

Widely used in:

  • SLE with aPL antibodies

V. PHARMACOLOGICAL MANAGEMENT OF OBSTETRIC APS

A. Women with Recurrent Pregnancy Loss + APS

Aspirin

Dose

75–100 mg/day

Start

Preconception or upon pregnancy confirmation


LMWH

Enoxaparin

Dose

40 mg SC OD

Dalteparin

| Dose | 5000 IU SC OD |

Start:After confirmation of viable pregnancy

Continue:Throughout pregnancy

Postpartum:Continue anticoagulation for 6 weeks postpartum


B. Obstetric APS WITH Prior Thrombosis

Requires FULL anticoagulation.

Treatment

  • Therapeutic LMWH throughout pregnancy
  • Aspirin low dose

Enoxaparin

Dose

1 mg/kg SC BD

PLUS

Aspirin75–100 mg/day


C. Drugs Contraindicated in Pregnancy

Warfarin

Risks:

  • Fetal warfarin syndrome
  • CNS abnormalities
  • Fetal bleeding

Avoid especially:

  • Weeks 6–12 gestation

DOACs-Avoid during pregnancy


MANAGEMENT OF APS-RELATED THROMBOCYTOPENIA

Usually mild.

Treatment if:

  • Severe thrombocytopenia
  • Bleeding
  • Platelets <30–50k

First-line Prednisone Dose-0.5–1 mg/kg/day

IVIG Used for:

  • Rapid platelet rise
  • Severe bleeding

RituximabFor refractory disease.