American Society of Hirudotherapy

Evaluation of platelet function in essential thrombocythemia under different analytical conditions

Research article published in Platelets (2020)

Last Updated: June 18, 2026Reviewed by: ASH Editorial Board
Research article — evidence reviewArticle reference
Evidence: Research reportClinical TrialsLussana et al. · Platelets, 2020

Abstract

Background. Studies of platelet aggregation (PA) in essential thrombocythemia (ET) reported contrasting results, likely due to differences in analytical conditions.Objective. We investigated platelet aggregation using different techniques and analytical conditions.Patients and Methods. PA was studied by light-transmission aggregometry (LTA) in platelet-rich plasma (PRP) and impedance aggregometry in PRP and whole blood (WB). ADP, collagen, thrombin receptor activating peptide (TRAP-14) and adrenaline were used as agonists. Since ET patients (n = 41) were on treatment with aspirin (100 mg/d), healthy controls (n = 29) were given aspirin (100 mg/d) for 5 days before testing: therefore, thromboxane A2-independent PA was tested in all subjects. Blood samples were collected in citrate (C) [low Ca2+] or lepirudin (L) [physiological Ca2+]; platelet count was adjusted to 250 x 109/L in a set of C-PRP (adjusted C-PRP) and left unmodified in the other samples.Results. Results of PA in 17 ET patients who were poor responders to aspirin (high serum thromboxane B2 levels) were not included in the analysis. With LTA, PA in ET was lower than in controls in adjusted C-PRP and normal in native C-PRP and L-PRP. With impedance aggregometry, PA in L-PRP and L-WB tended to be higher in ET than in controls. Platelet serotonin and ADP contents were reduced in ET. The percentages of circulating platelets expressing P-selectin and platelet-leukocyte hetero-aggregates were higher in ET.Conclusions. Analytical conditions dramatically affect in vitro PA of ET patients, which appears defective under the least physiological conditions and normal/supranormal under conditions that are closer to the physiological.

Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.

Publication typeEvaluation StudyJournal Article
Indexed MeSH termsAdenine NucleotidesAdultAgedAged, 80 and overAspirinBlood PlateletsCitric AcidFemaleHumansMaleMiddle AgedP-Selectin

Summary

Peer-reviewed clinical and outcomes research relevant to medicinal leech therapy and its biology. Indexed in PubMed and verified against the NCBI record.

Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy

This study examined platelet aggregation in 41 essential thrombocythemia patients versus 29 aspirin-treated healthy controls using multiple techniques, and found that results depend heavily on analytical conditions: aggregation appeared defective under the least physiological conditions (citrated, count-adjusted platelet-rich plasma) but normal or supranormal under conditions closer to physiology. Of direct interest to ASH, the investigators used lepirudin (a recombinant leech-hirudin anticoagulant) precisely to preserve physiological calcium during testing, illustrating how a leech-derived thrombin inhibitor serves as a research-grade anticoagulant whose properties differ meaningfully from citrate. The caveat is that this is an ex vivo laboratory comparison of assay conditions in a specific patient population, not a clinical-outcome or therapeutic study of leech therapy, so its value to hirudotherapy is methodological rather than clinical.

Citation

Evaluation of platelet function in essential thrombocythemia under different analytical conditions.

Lussana et al. · Platelets, 2020

Added to ASH library: May 28, 2026 · Site last updated: June 18, 2026

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