von Willebrand disease
- PMID: 39054329
- DOI: 10.1038/s41572-024-00536-8
von Willebrand disease
Abstract
von Willebrand disease (VWD) is the most common inherited bleeding disorder. The disorder is characterized by excessive mucocutaneous bleeding. The most common bleeding manifestations of this condition include nosebleeds, bruising, bleeding from minor wounds, menorrhagia or postpartum bleeding in women as well as bleeding after surgery. Other less frequent symptoms include gastrointestinal bleeding, haematomas or haemarthroses. VWD pathophysiology is complex and results from defects in von Willebrand factor (VWF) glycoprotein. Quantitative deficiencies are responsible for type 1 VWD with a partial decrease of VWF and type 3 with the complete absence of VWF. Qualitative abnormalities cause type 2 VWD, being further divided into types 2A, 2B, 2M and 2N. Although common, VWD is at risk of misdiagnosis, overdiagnosis and underdiagnosis owing to several factors, including complex diagnosis, variability of bleeding symptoms, presence of external variables (blood groups and other physiological modifiers such as exercise, thyroid hormones, oestrogens, and ageing), and lack of disease awareness among non-specialist health-care providers. Establishing the correct VWD diagnosis requires an array of specialized phenotypic assays and/or molecular genetic testing of the VWF gene. The management of bleeding includes increasing endogenous VWF levels with desmopressin or infusion of exogenous VWF concentrates (plasma-derived or recombinant). Fibrinolytic inhibitors, topical haemostatic agents and hormonal therapies are used as effective adjunctive measures.
© 2024. Springer Nature Limited.
References
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- Sadler, J. et al. Update on the pathophysiology and classification of von Willebrand disease: a report of the Subcommittee on von Willebrand Factor. J. Thromb. Haemost. 4, 2103–2114 (2006). The official classification of VWD by the Scientific and Standardization Committee of the ISTH. - PubMed - DOI
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- von Willebrand, E. Hereditar pseudo-hemophili. Fin. Lakaresallskapets Handlinger 68, 87–112 (1926).
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- Sadler, J. E. Low von Willebrand factor: sometimes a risk factor and sometimes a disease. Hematology Am. Soc. Hematol. Educ. Program 2009, 106–112 (2009). - DOI
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