Hematology: Factor V Leiden
Factor V Leiden
Definition
- Mutation Causes Factor V (5) to Become Resistant to Activated Protein C (APC)
- APC Normally Inhibits Factor V
- Resistance Induces Hypercoagulability
- The Most Common Congenital Hypercoagulability Disorder
- Prevalence:
- Heterozygous Mutation: 2.0-7.0%
- Homozygous Mutations: 0.2-0.5%
VTE Risk
- Lifetime Risk for VTE: 5-10%
- Increased Risk:
- Thrombophilic Family
- Concurrent Prothrombin G20210A Mutation (Referred to as a Double/Combined Heterozygote)
- Homozygous Mutation
- Risk for Recurrent VTE After a First VTE is Only Modestly Increased
Diagnosis
- Diagnosis: APC Resistance Assay (Functional Coagulation Test) or DNA Testing (Genetic Test)
- Indication for Testing:
- Thrombophilic Family (Strong Family History of VTE)
- VTE at a Young Age (< 50 Years)
- VTE in an Unusually Location (Portal/Hepatic/Mesenteric/Cerebral)
- Recurrent VTE
- In General, If Testing Should Also Test for Other Inherited Thrombophilias
Management
- VTE Treatment: Anticoagulation – Similar to the General Population
- VTE Prevention: Generally Can Avoid Routine Chronic Anticoagulation Unless Otherwise Indicated or High-Risk