It is also associated with the Johnson & Johnson vaccine Janssen, although the vaccine is not currently included in Australia’s vaccination program.
Now, a new study from Flinders University and SA Pathology may help to explain what’s causing the rare side effect.
Researchers looked at five unrelated people who had all experienced the clotting complication, finding all of the patients had unusually structured antibodies against a protein called platelet factor 4 (PF4), which is involved in blood clotting.
Additionally, all five had a specific version of a gene responsible for producing these antibodies.
“We knew previously that PF4 was directly involved in the clotting disorder, and we knew that aberrant antibodies against PF4 are responsible, but what we don’t know is how and why some people develop them,” says lead author Dr. Wang, from Flinders University’s College of Medicine and Public Health and SA Pathology.
They also found that all of the patients carried a specific variant of one gene, called IGLV3-21*02, most commonly occurring in people of European descent.
The other specific amino acid sequences of these antibodies from each patient were derived from separate basic sequences but had all evolved to carry very similar properties, making them very potent attackers of the PF4 protein.
Together, this suggests that it is the combination of a variant in a gene and the evolution of this antibody towards targeting the PF4 protein in a destructive manner, which is leading to this harmful side-effect.
Identifying the gene could make it possible to produce a genetic screening tool to identify patients who are at risk of this severe complication in the future.
It also provides a unique opportunity for targeted, specific therapy development aimed at neutralizing this highly damaging but very specific antibody.
Source: Medindia