The objective of this study was to validate a simple factor Xa-based clotting test developed to monitor procoagulant phospholipids (PPLs) and platelet-derived microparticles (PMPs). This assay is easily automated, giving it a major advantage over the more laborious and expensive flow cytometry, electron microscopy and ELISA techniques in general usage at present. The intra-assay and inter-assay variation coefficients were less than 5% at both low and high levels of PPLs. The test is not affected by other clotting factors is assured by the use of a phospholipid-free animal plasma, which provides excess factor V, fibrinogen and prothrombin. This test was evaluated in apparently healthy volunteers and in selected patient groups associated with increased levels of PMPs in the circulation (diabetes mellitus, sickle cell disease, thyroid cancer and patients with multiple trauma). The study showed that XaCT has a high discriminating power for PPLs and that the patient groups have significantly highly increased PPLs activities when compared with healthy volunteers. Although of a preliminary nature, the test has shown that it has the sensitivity for discriminating severity of disease, as it could detect patients in sickle cell crisis and differentiate between type 1 and 2 diabetes. In conclusion, the combination of reliability, reproducibility and easy performance makes the XaCT assay a simple test to screen for PPLs in plasma samples.
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