NMR methods for monitoring blood clot formation
09797914 ยท 2017-10-24
Assignee
Inventors
- Thomas Jay Lowery, Jr. (Belmont, MA)
- Vyacheslav Papkov (Waltham, MA)
- Walter W. Massefski, Jr. (Sharon, MA)
- Rahul K. Dhanda (Needham, MA)
- Edward Chris Thayer (Woodinville, WA)
Cpc classification
Y02A90/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
G01R33/448
PHYSICS
G01N2800/226
PHYSICS
A61B5/7246
HUMAN NECESSITIES
G01N24/088
PHYSICS
A61M60/216
HUMAN NECESSITIES
G01N33/86
PHYSICS
G01N2800/52
PHYSICS
A61M60/508
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61M60/122
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B5/02007
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61M60/178
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61M60/117
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
G01N24/00
PHYSICS
Abstract
The invention features a method of monitoring a clotting process by measuring a signal characteristic of the NMR relaxation of water in a sample undergoing clotting to produce NMR relaxation data and determining from the NMR relaxation data a magnetic resonance parameter of water in the sample characteristic of the clots being formed.
Claims
1. A method of monitoring a clotting process comprising: (i) adding to whole blood obtained from a subject a clotting initiator to initiate a clotting process; (ii) during the clotting process making a plurality of T2 relaxation rate measurements on the whole blood sample at a series of time points during said process to produce a plurality of T2 relaxation rate decay curves, (iii) transforming the T2 relaxation rate measurements using an algorithm that distinguishes two or more separate water populations within the whole blood sample at one or more of said time points, wherein the two or more water populations comprise a water population having a serum-associated T2 signal and a water population having a clot-associated T2 signal, and the serum-associated T2 signal and the clot-associated T2 signal are separately characterized by one or more magnetic resonance parameters; (iv) obtaining values of the one or more magnetic resonance parameters for the water population having a serum-associated T2 signal and a water population having a clot-associated T2 signal; and (v) on the basis of the results of step (iv), monitoring said clotting process.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising (a) calculating the difference between the value of the serum-associated T2 signal and the value of the clot-associated T2 signal; and (b) on the basis of the difference, determining the activity of the platelets in the whole blood.
3. The method of claim 1, further comprising (a) following step (i), measuring the period of time prior to the initial detection of the clot-associated T2 signal; and (b) on the basis of the period of time, determining the clotting time for the whole blood.
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising (a) following step (i), calculating a T2 time curve for a first water population; (b) calculating the maximum value of the second derivative of the T2 time curve; and (c) on the basis of the result of step (c), calculating a value characteristic of clotting time.
5. The method of claim 1, further comprising calculating the T2 value for the whole blood prior to initiating clot formation, and on the basis of the T2 value, determining the hematocrit of the whole blood.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein prior to step (ii), fibrinogen is added to the whole blood sample.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the clotting initiator is an intrinsic pathway activator.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the clotting initiator is an extrinsic pathway activator.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the clotting initiator is tissue factor.
10. The method of claim 1, further comprising determining whether the whole blood is hypercoagulable, hypocoagulable, or normal.
11. The method of claim 10, further comprising, prior to step (i), (a) administering an anticoagulation therapy to the subject; and (b) if the subject is found to be hypercoagulable, identifying the subject as a non-responder to the anticoagulation therapy.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein the whole blood sample has a volume between 2 microliters and 400 microliters.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein the whole blood sample has a volume between 2 microliters and 250 microliters.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein the whole blood sample has a volume between 2 microliters and 50 microliters.
15. The method of claim 1, wherein the whole blood sample has a volume between 200 microliters and 500 microliters.
16. The method of claim 1, wherein step (i) comprises adding the whole blood to a tube containing one or more clotting initiators, and mixing the contents to initiate a clotting process.
17. The method of claim 1, wherein said algorithm comprises an algorithm selected from the group consisting of a multi-exponential algorithm, a bi-exponential algorithm, a tri-exponential algorithm, a decaying exponential algorithm, a Laplace transform, a goodness-of-fit algorithm, an SSE algorithm, a least squares algorithm, and a non-negative least squares algorithm.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein said algorithm is an inverse Laplace transform.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein said inverse Laplace transform includes a lower bound for the T2 time constants of from 1 to 50 ms and an upper bound for the T2 time constants of from 1000 to 4000 ms.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein said blood sample is plasma, platelet poor plasma, or platelet rich plasma, and said upper bound for the T2 time constants is from 2500 to 4000 ms.
21. The method of claim 19, wherein said blood sample is a whole blood sample and said upper bound for the T2 time constants is from 1000 to 2000 ms.
22. The method of claim 19, wherein each of the two or more water populations has a distinct relaxation rate at one or more time points during the clotting process.
23. The method of claim 19, wherein each of the two or more water populations has a distinct T2 signal intensity at one or more time points during the clotting process.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(28) The methods and devices of the invention can be used to assess the risk and occurrence of thrombotic events, including myocardial ischemic events in a patient having or suspected of having vascular disease, particularly in patients who have undergone percutaneous intervention and may be at acute risk of, for example, stent thrombosis, vessel restenosis, myocardial infarction, or stroke. For example, the methods and devices of the invention can be used to assess platelet reactivity (i.e., relative concentration of platelet-associated water molecules in a clot), clotting kinetics, clot strength, clot stability, and time-to-fibrin generation (i.e., R), as indices for risk of a thrombotic event, such as myocardial ischemia, independent of responsiveness to drug therapy (e.g., as assessed by a change in platelet reactivity following administration of an anti-platelet drug such as clopidogrel). These indices can also be used to prevent complications arising from surgical and percutaneous vascular procedures (e.g., stent placement or balloon angioplasty) such as stent thrombosis or re-stenosis. Furthermore, the methods and devices of the invention can be used to identify a safe and effective therapy (e.g., dose, regimen, anti-platelet therapy, among others) for a patient at risk of a thrombotic event or undergoing a surgical procedure.
(29) The methods and devices of the invention can be used to monitor complex samples having water in more than one location or compartment (i.e., samples having more than one water population). For, example, a heterogeneous sample, namely whole blood, there are various populations of water, e.g. plasma water, compartmentalized water, i.e. cellular (erythrocyte, leukocyte, and thrombocyte) water, and water associated with functional features of whole blood processes such as coagulation, e.g. serum, clots, or clot dissolution. Similarly, in a sample undergoing a rheological transition, there is generally more than one population of water; e.g. water associated with a gel state, water not associated with a gel state, and, in some instances, water associated with a specialized compartment of the sample (i.e. cellular water). The methods of the invention permit one to monitor changes in a sample by simultaneously observing changes in the various water populations present in a sample. The changes can include the formation of new water populations or changes in the relative signal of existing water populations, both of which can be characteristic of the underlying physical properties of the sample before, during, or after a change in rheology (e.g., an ordering or disordering of structure in the sample).
(30) Clotting Initiation
(31) For performing the methods of the invention, clotting may be initiated using a variety of techniques. Citrated kaolin (CK) is a common global initiator for aPTT (activated partial thromboplastin time) and whole blood clotting times. To start the clotting process, calcium chloride and kaolin is mixed with a citrated blood sample. CK-activated samples are characterized by clot formations where platelets and fibrin contribute to the clot. Alternatively, an activator RF may be used to initiate clotting with or without the addition to a platelet activator such as TRAP, AA, or ADP. A-activated samples are characterized by clot formations where fibrin rather than platelets contribute primarily to the clot. Alternatively ADP may be used to activate the clot. ADP-activated samples are characterized by clot formations where fibrin contributes primarily to the clot and platelets contribute to lesser degree. The signal response observed under different activation conditions can be diagnostic of the hemostatic condition of a subject.
(32) Other blood clotting activators that can be used in the methods of the invention include collagen, epinephrine, ristocetin, thrombin, calcium, tissue factor, thromboplastin, kaolin, serotonin, platelet activating factor (PAF), thromboxane A2 (TXA2), fibrinogen, von Willebrand factor (VFW), elastin, fibrinonectin, laminin, vitronectin, thrombospondin, and lanthanide ions (e.g., lanthanum, europium, ytterbium, etc.). Combinations of activators can be used, for example, to aid in identifying an underlying hemostatic condition that results in a subject's blood sample being hypocoagulable.
(33) Signal Acquisition and Processing
(34) Standard radiofrequency pulse sequences for the determination of nuclear resonance parameters are known in the art, for example, the Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) is traditionally used if relaxation constant T.sub.2 is to be determined Optimization of the radiofrequency pulse sequences, including selection of the frequency of the radiofrequency pulses in the sequence, pulse powers and pulse lengths, depends on the system under investigation and is performed using procedures known in the art.
(35) Nuclear magnetic resonance parameters that can be obtained using the methods of the present invention include but are not limited to T1, T2, T1/T2 hybrid, T.sub.1rho, T.sub.2rho and T.sub.2*. Typically, at least one of the one or more nuclear resonance parameters that are obtained using the methods of the present invention is spin-spin relaxation constant T2.
(36) As with other diagnostics and analytical instrumentation, the goal of NMR-based diagnostics is to extract information from a sample and deliver a high-confidence result to the user. As the information flows from the sample to the user it typically undergoes several transformations to tailor the information to the specific user. The methods and devices of the invention can be used to obtain diagnostic information about the hemostatic condition of a subject. This is achieved by processing the NMR relaxation signal into one or more series of component signals representative of the different populations of water molecules present, e.g., in a blood sample that is clotting or clotted. For example, NMR relaxation data, such as T2, can be fit to a decaying exponential curve defined by the following equation:
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where (t) is the signal intensity as a function of time, t, A.sub.i is the amplitude coefficient for the ith component, and (T).sub.i the decay constant (such as T2) for the ith component. For relaxation phenomenon discussed here the detected signal is the sum of a discrete number of components (i=1, 2, 3, 4 . . . n). Such functions are called mono-, bi-, tri-, tetra- or multi-exponential, respectively. Due to the widespread need for analyzing multi-exponential processes in science and engineering, there are several established mathematical methods for rapidly obtaining estimates of A.sub.i and (T).sub.i for each coefficient. Methods that have been successfully applied and may be applied in the processing of the raw data obtained using the methods of the invention include Laplace transforms, algebraic methods, graphical analysis, nonlinear least squares (of which there are many flavors), differentiation methods, the method of modulating functions, integration method, method of moments, rational function approximation, Pad-Laplace transform, and the maximum entropy method (see Istratov, A. A. & Vyvenko, O. F. Rev. Sci. Inst. 70:1233 (1999)). Other methods, which have been specifically demonstrated for low field NMR include singular value decomposition (Lupu, M. & Todor, D. Chemometrics and Intelligent Laboratory Systems 29:11 (1995)) and factor analysis.
(38) There are several software programs and algorithms available that use one or more of these exponential fitting methods. One of the most widely cited sources for exponential fitting programs are those written and provided by Stephen Provencher, called DISCRETE and CONTIN (Provencher, S. W. & Vogel, R. H. Math. Biosci. 50:251 (1980); Provencher, S. W. Comp. Phys. Comm 27:213 (1982)). Discrete is an algorithm for solving for up to nine discrete components in a multi-component exponential curve. CONTIN is an algorithm that uses an inverse Laplace transform to solve for samples that have a distribution of relaxation times. Commercial applications using multiexponential analyses use these or similar algorithms. In fact, Bruker minispec uses the publicly-available CONTIN algorithm for some of their analysis. For the invention described here, the relaxation times are expected to be discrete values unique to each sample and not a continuous distribution, therefore programs like CONTIN are not needed although they could be used. The code for many other exponential fitting methods are generally available (Istratov, A. A. & Vyvenko, O. F. Rev. Sci. Inst. 70:1233 (1999)) and can be used to obtain medical diagnostic information according to the methods of the present invention. Information is available regarding how the signal to noise ratio and total sampling time relates to the maximum number of terms that can be determined, the maximum resolution that can be achieved, and the range of decay constants that can be fitted. For a signal to noise ratio of 10.sup.4 the theoretical limit as to the resolution of two decay constants measured, independent of the analytical method, is a resolution =(T.sub.i/T.sub.i+1) of >1.2 (Istratov, A. A. & Vyvenko, O. F. Rev. Sci. Inst. 70:1233 (1999)). Thus it is believed that the difference between resolvable decay constants scales with their magnitudes, which is not entirely intuitive and is unlike resolution by means of optical detection. The understanding of the maximum resolution and the dependence on resolution on the signal-to-noise ratio will assist in assessing the performance of the fitting algorithm.
(39) The methods of the invention can be compared to systems and devices known in the art, such TEG, ROTEM, or SONOCLOT, or other device to measure a rheological change. Further the methods of the invention can be used on a benchtop NMR relaxometer, benchtop time domain system, or NMR analyzer (e.g., ACT, Bruker, CEM Corporation, Exstrom Laboratories, Quantum Magnetics, GE Security division, Halliburton, HTS-111 Magnetic Solutions, MR Resources, NanoMR, NMR Petrophysics, Oxford Instruments, Process NMR Associates, Qualion NMR Analyzers, SPINLOCK Magnetic Resonance Solutions, or Stelar, Resonance Systems).
(40) The CPMG pulse sequence used to collect data with a T2reader is designed to detect the inherent T2 relaxation time of the sample. Typically, this is dictated by one value, but for samples containing a complex mixture of states (e.g., a sample undergoing a clotting process or dissolution process), a distribution of T2 values can be observed. In this situation, the signal obtained with a CPMG sequence is a sum of exponentials. One solution for extracting relaxation information from a T2reader output is to fit a sum of exponentials in a least-squares fashion. Practically, this requires a priori information on how many functions to fit. A second solution is to use the Inverse Laplace transform (ILT) to solve for a distribution of T2 values that make up the exponential signal observed. Again, the results of the CPMG sequence S(t), is assumed to be the sum of exponentials:
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where A.sub.i is the amplitude corresponding to the relaxation time constant T2.sub.i. If, instead of a discrete sum of exponentials, the signal is assumed to be a distribution of T2 values, the sum over states can be represented b:
S(t)=.sub.0.sup.A(1/T2)e.sup.t/T2d(1/T2)(5)
This has the same functional form as the ILT:
F(t)=.sub.0.sup.A(s)e.sup.stds(6),
and can be treated as such. The ILT of an exponential function requires constraints to solve. A few methods that can be used to impose constraints are CONTIN, finite mixture modeling (FMM), and neural networks (NN). An inverse Laplace transform may also be used in the generation of a 3D data set. A 3D data set can be generated by collecting a time series of T2 decay curves and applying an inverse Laplace transform to each decay curve to form a 3D data set. Alternatively, a 2D inverse Laplace transform can be applied to a pre-assembled 3D data set to generate a transformed 3D data set describing the distribution of T2 times.
(42) In a heterogeneous environment containing two phases, several different exchange regimes may be operative. In such an environment having two water populations (a and b), r.sub.a and r.sub.b correspond to the relaxation rates of water in the two populations; .sub.a and .sub.b correspond to the fraction of nuclei in each phase; .sub.a and .sub.b correspond to residence time in each phase; and a=(1/.sub.a)+(1/.sub.b) corresponds to the chemical exchange rate. The exchange regimes can be designated as: (1) slow exchange: if the two populations are static or exchanging slowly relative to the relaxation rates r.sub.a and r.sub.b, the signal contains two separate components, decaying with time constants T.sub.2a, and T.sub.2b; (2) fast exchange: if the rate for water molecules exchanging between the two environments is rapid compared to r.sub.a and r.sub.b, the total population follows a single exponential decay with an average relaxation rate (r.sub.av) given by the weighted sum of the relaxation rates of the separate populations; and (3) intermediate exchange: in the general case where there are two relaxation rates r.sub.1 and r.sub.2 with r.sub.1 equal to r.sub.a in the slow exchange limit r.sub.a<r.sub.b, Amp.sub.1+Amp.sub.2=1, and where r.sub.1,2 goes to the average relaxation rate in the fast exchange limit, equations 7, 8, 9, and 10 may be applied:
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(44) The invention also features the use of a pulsed field gradient or a fixed field gradient in the collection of relaxation rate data. The invention further features the use of the techniques of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) as described in Vidmar et al. (Vidmar et al., NMR Biomed. 23: 34-40 (2010)), which is herein incorporated by reference, or any methods used in porous media NMR (see, e.g., Bergman et al., Phys. Rev. E 51: 3393-3400 (1995), which is herein incorporated by reference).
(45) Alternatively, when the methods of the invention are carried out using the measurement of the T2*, or free induction decay, rather than T2, the relaxation properties of a specific class of, for example, water protons in the sample can be made using an off resonance radiation (i.e., radiation that is not precisely at the Larmour precession frequency). The output can be in the form of the height of a single echo obtained with a T2 measuring pulse sequence rather than a complete echo train. In contrast, normal T2 measurements utilize the declining height of a number of echoes to determine T2. The T2* approach can include the steps of shifting the frequency or strength of the applied magnetic field, and measuring the broadness of the water proton absorption peak, where broader peaks or energy absorption are correlated with higher values of T2.
(46) Paramagnetic Agents
(47) The methods of the invention can be carried out in the presence of a paramagnetic agent (e.g., manganese, manganese complexes, gadolinium, gadolinium complexes, or superparamagnetic particles) added, e.g., to the blood prior to initiating clotting. The paramagnetic agent can be free manganese, a manganese complex (e.g., the EDTA complex of manganese), free gadolinium, a gadolinium complex (e.g., the DTPA or DOTA complex of gadolinium), or a superparamagnetic particle. The paramagnetic agent can be used to distinguish clotted from unclotted samples at an earlier time point following the initiation of clotting (see
(48) The superparamagnetic particles that can be used in the methods of the invention include those described, e.g., in U.S. Pat. No. 7,564,245 and U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2003-0092029, each of which is incorporated herein by reference. The superparamagnetic particles are generally in the form of conjugates, that is, a superparamagnetic particle coated with moieties that minimize specific and non-specific binding of the particles with constituents of the whole blood sample being measured. The particles have high relaxivity owing to the superparamagnetism of their iron, metal oxide, or other ferro or ferrimagnetic nanomaterials. Iron, cobalt, and nickel compounds and their alloys, rare earth elements such as gadolinium, and certain intermetallics such as gold and vanadium are ferromagnets can be used to produce superparamagnetic particles. The superparamagnetic particles can be monodisperse (a single crystal of a magnetic material, e.g., metal oxide, such as superparamagnetic iron oxide, per superparamagnetic particle) or polydisperse (e.g., a plurality of crystals per magnetic particle). The magnetic metal oxide can also comprise cobalt, magnesium, zinc, or mixtures of these metals with iron. The superparamagnetic particles typically include metal oxide crystals of about 1-25 nm, e.g., about 3-10 nm, or about 5 nm in diameter per crystal. The superparamagnetic particles can also include a polymer component in the form of a core and/or coating, e.g., about 5 to 20 nm thick or more. The overall size of the superparamagnetic particles can be, e.g., from 20 to 50 nm, from 50 to 200 nm, from 100 to 300 nm, from 250 to 500 nm, from 400 to 600 nm, from 500 to 750 nm, from 700 to 1,200 nm, from 1,000 to 1,500 nm, or from 1,500 to 2,000 nm. Superparamagnetic particle size can be controlled by adjusting reaction conditions, for example, by using low temperature during the neutralization of iron salts with a base as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,262,176. Uniform particle size materials can also be made by fractionating the particles using centrifugation, ultrafiltration, or gel filtration, as described, for example in U.S. Pat. No. 5,492,814. Superparamagnetic particles can also be synthesized according to the method of Molday (Molday, R. S. and D. MacKenzie, Immunospecific ferromagnetic iron-dextran reagents for the labeling and magnetic separation of cells, J. Immunol. Methods, 52:353 (1982)), and treated with periodate to form aldehyde groups. The aldehyde-containing superparamagnetic particles can then be reacted with a diamine (e.g., ethylene diamine or hexanediamine), which will form a Schiff base, followed by reduction with sodium borohydride or sodium cyanoborohydride. The superparamagnetic particles can be formed from a ferrofluid (i.e., a stable colloidal suspension of superparamagnetic particles). For example, the superparamagnetic particle can be a composite of multiple metal oxide crystals of the order of a few tens of nanometers in size and dispersed in a fluid containing a surfactant, which adsorbs onto the particles and stabilizes them, or by precipitation, in a basic medium, of a solution of metal ions. Suitable ferrofluids are sold by the company Liquids Research Ltd. under the references: WHKS1S9 (A, B or C), which is a water-based ferrofluid comprising magnetite (Fe.sub.3O.sub.4), having particles 10 nm in diameter; WHJS1 (A, B or C), which is an isoparaffin-based ferrofluid comprising particles of magnetite (Fe.sub.3O.sub.4) 10 nm in diameter; and BKS25 dextran, which is a water-based ferrofluid stabilized with dextran, comprising particles of magnetite (Fe.sub.3O.sub.4) 9 nm in diameter. Other suitable ferrofluids for use in the systems and methods of the invention are oleic acid-stabilized ferrofluids available from Ademtech, which include ca. 70% weight -Fe.sub.2O.sub.3 particles (ca. 10 nm in diameter), 15% weight octane, and 15% weight oleic acid. The superparamagnetic particles are typically a composite including multiple metal oxide crystals and an organic matrix, and having a surface decorated with functional groups (i.e., amine groups or carboxy groups) for linking binding moieties to the surface of the superparamagnetic particle. For example, the superparamagnetic particles useful in the methods of the invention include those commercially available from Dynal, Seradyn, Kisker, Miltenyi Biotec, Chemicell, Anvil, Biopal, Estapor, Genovis, Thermo Fisher Scientific, JSR micro, Invitrogen, and Ademtech, as well as those described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,101,435; 4,452,773; 5,204,457; 5,262,176; 5,424,419; 6,165,378; 6,866,838; 7,001,589; and 7,217,457, each of which is incorporated herein by reference.
(49) For certain assays requiring high sensitivity, analyte detection using T2 relaxation assays can require selecting a proper particle to enable sufficiently sensitive magnetic field-induced agglomeration. Higher sensitivities can be achieved using particles that contain multiple superparamagnetic iron oxide cores (5-15 nm diameter) within a single larger polymer matrix or ferrofluid assembly (100 nm-1200 nm total diameter, such as particles having an average diameter of 100 nm, 200 nm, 250 nm, 300 nm, 500 nm, 800 nm, or 1000 nm), or by using a higher magnetic moment materials or particles with higher density, and/or particles with higher iron content. Without being limited by theory, it is postulated these types of particles provided a sensitivity gain of over 100 due to a much higher number of iron atoms per particle, which is believed to lead to an increase in sensitivity due to the decreased number of particles present in the assay solution and possibly a higher amount of superparamagnetic iron affected by each field-induced agglomeration.
(50) For certain assays it may be desirable to minimize field assisted agglomeration of the superparamagnetic particles by using particles that are less than 40 nm is diameter in the assay.
(51) Database of Signature Curves
(52) In one embodiment, the invention features data processing tools to transform the raw relaxation NMR data into a format that provides signature curves characteristic of hemostatic conditions. Preferred transforms include the Laplace or inverse Laplace transform (ILT). The data for each T2 measurement may be transformed from the time dimension where signal intensity is plotted verses time to a T2 relaxation dimension. The ILT provides not only information about the different relaxation rates present in the sample and their relative magnitudes but also reports on the breadth of distribution of those signals.
(53) Each acquired T2 relaxation curve has a corresponding two dimensional signature that maps all of the different populations of water, or different T2 relaxation environments, that water is experiencing in the sample. These curves can be compiled to form a 3D data set by stacking the plots over the duration of the clotting time dimension. This can be used to generate a 3D surface that shows how the different populations of water change as a function of time.
(54) The T2 signatures may become clinically relevant in cases whereby underlying pathology is not discriminated by current techniques. For example, patients that have abnormal PT or aPTT values are often worked up with additional studies that includes PT, aPTT, or PT and aPTT analysis using a 1:1 mixture of a patient blood with normal plasma (to rule out a factor deficiency), and the results may point to a specific factor or von Willebrand factor deficiency. However, frequently patients having a clotting factor deficiency have more than one deficiency or have an unbalance or unchecked clotting cascade. In these patients, a single test for one factor deficiency will not reveal the full dysfunction and the clinician must rely on clinical symptomology (excessive bleeding or clotting) and, unfortunately, time may lead to a deleterious outcome. The ability to detect T2 signatures (for patients having normal or abnormal hemostatic conditions) will allow for rapid understanding of complex pathophysiological coagulation cascade conditions and improve clinical outcomes.
(55) The data gathered using the methods of the invention can be represented using 3D plots generated from different NMR parameters. Additional dimensions can be added by looking at specific patient types or clotting curve types. Data reduction methods can be used to simplify the complex information that is available. Such techniques as principal component analyses (PCA), automated feature extraction methods, or other data handling methods can be used. Ideally, a library of signatures, 2D, and 3D plots can be generated for a wide variety of clinical conditions. For example, two dimensional (intensity versus T2 value or T2 value versus time) or three dimensional representations (intensity versus T2 value versus time). The T2 values in the two- or three dimensional representation may be replaced with or compared to other NMR signals such as T1, T1/T2 hybrid, T.sub.1rho, T.sub.2rho and T.sub.2*.
(56) In related embodiments, a clotting or dissolution process within a sample is assessed by an NMR parameter extracted from one or more free induction decay (FID) signals obtained from the sample. For example, an NMR parameter can be extracted from the signal to noise ratio of an FID, from a comparison of an FID to a predetermined threshold, from the integration of an FID, or from a ratio calculation using different points of the FID. The NMR parameters obtained by the method can be used to characterize a variety of clotting or dissolution processes. In a specific example, values extracted from one or more FIDs of a blood sample may be used to calculate blood clotting behaviors such as clotting time (R), fibrinolytic behavior, clot strength (MA), kinetic behavior of the clot, platelet-associated clot strength (MA.sub.PLATELET), functional fibrinogen-associated clot strength (MA.sub.FF), or percent lysis 30 minutes after MA (LY30). Likewise, data extracted from FID data can be used to assemble a library of signature curves.
(57) 3D Data Plots
(58) 3D representations of the T2 data in a sample undergoing a clotting process or a dissolution process may be generated using the methods of the invention (e.g., the method described in Example 18). In certain embodiments, the dimensions of the generated 3D plots correspond to a relaxation time (e.g., T2 or 1/T2) dimension, an intensity or amplitude dimension, and a time dimension. The time dimension represents the time over which the clotting process has proceeded or is proceeding. The 3D plots obtained from a clotting blood sample exhibit a variety of 3D surface features that correspond with separate water populations in different physical and/or chemical environments within the sample. The 3D plots and the data used to generate the 3D plots may be mined for indices or clotting behaviors associated with the blood sample (e.g., the hematocrit, clot strength (MA), clotting time (R), platelet activity, fibrinogen activity, fibrinolysis, etc.). The 3D plots or the data used to generate the 3D data plots may also be used to discover new indices.
(59) The information contained within the different 3D surface features and water populations evident in the 3D plot may be associated with particular indices and clotting behaviors. The 3D plots can be used to generate qualitative, semiqualitative, and/or qualitative results for a specific parameter or index. For example, the hematocrit of a blood sample may be calculated from properties of the initial water population, the clotting time and fibrinolysis behaviors may be calculated from properties of the diverging water population having a T2 time of 80-400 milliseconds, and the platelet activity and clot strength may be calculated from properties of the second diverging water population, which has a T2 time of 400-2200 milliseconds. A variety of methods can be used to extract the indices or clotting behaviors from the 3D data set. For example, the slope or curvature of a 3D surface feature of a 3D plot may be correlated with a clotting behavior. A cross-section of a 3D plot may also be used to calculate a clotting behavior. In particular, a cross-section showing T2 intensity as a function of time for a particular T2 time may be useful in calculating the clotting time (R) and/or fibrinolysis. A cross-section of a 3D plot showing T2 time as a function of intensity at a given time (a T2 relaxation spectrum) depicts the various water populations present in a sample at a given time. The features of a T2 relaxation spectrum can be mined for a range of clotting behaviors. For example, the difference between two signals in a T2 relaxation spectrum may be used to evaluate clot strength. The integration of a particular 3D surface feature, such as the volume of a particular feature, or curve from a cross-section of a 3D plot may also be useful in establishing a clotting behavior (e.g. clot strength). Clotting behaviors may also be extracted through the integration of a range of T2 relaxation spectra collected at sequential or disparate time points.
(60) Alternatively, the 3D plots can be used to identify a feature characteristic of clot behavior. The feature can be one that is measured without 3D analysis, such as via pulse sequence for selectively monitoring a water population having an average T2 relaxation rate of about 400 milliseconds or 1,000 milliseconds at a particular time post clot initiation. Optionally, the water population is measured exclusive of other water populations in the sample.
(61) The features of a T2 relaxation curve, including the range of T2 values associated with a particular signal, may vary based on the instrument (e.g., a T2reader or a Bruker minispec) used to collect data. Likewise, the range of T2 values for a given sample may depend on the material used to construct the tubes (e.g., plastic or glass) containing the sample during T2 measurements. The invention encompasses the use of any magnetic resonance instrument and any sample container in the collection of a 3D data set used in the analysis of a blood sample.
(62) Management of Patients
(63) The methods and the devices of the invention can be used to provide a point-of-care evaluation of the hemostatic condition of a patient (e.g., for coagulation management of patients undergoing surgery, to identify patients at risk of thrombotic complications, to identify a patient resistant to antiplatelet therapy, to monitor anticoagulation therapy in a patient, to monitor antiplatelet therapy in a patient, and/or to monitor procoagulant therapy in a patient).
(64) There are medical circumstances for which a coagulation test is requested including: 1) finding a cause for abnormal bleeding or bruising, 2) in patients with an autoimmune disease, 3) in patients with an underlying cardiovascular disorder, 4) before procedures or surgeries where too much bleeding may be a concern, 5) monitoring anti-coagulant therapy, 6) monitoring peri-operative and trauma patients, and 7) identifying patients with sepsis or septic shock.
(65) Coagulation management of patients undergoing cardiac surgery is complex because of a balance between anticoagulation for cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) and hemostasis after CPB. Furthermore, an increasing number of patients have impaired platelet function at baseline due to administration of antiplatelet drugs. During CPB, optimal anticoagulation dictates that coagulation is antagonized and platelets are prevented from activation so that clots do not form. After surgery, coagulation abnormalities, platelet dysfunction, and fibrinolysis can occur, creating a situation whereby hemostatic integrity must be restored. The complex process of anticoagulation with heparin, antagonism with protamine, and postoperative hemostasis therapy can be guided by the method and devices of the invention (a point of care test) that assess hemostatic function in a timely and accurate manner.
(66) Problems associated with poor liver function (e.g., decreased synthesis and clearance of clotting factors and platelet defects) can lead to impaired hemostasis and hyperfibrinolysis. Systemic complications, such as sepsis and disseminated intravascular coagulation, further complicate a preexisting coagulopathy. Marked changes in hemostasis in orthotopic liver transplantation occur during the anhepatic phase and immediately after organ reperfusion, mainly a hyperfibrinolysis resulting from accumulation of tissue plasminogen activator due to inadequate hepatic clearance and a release of exogenous heparin and endogenous heparin-like substances. Thus, patients undergoing hepatic surgery, and particularly orthotopic liver transplantation, may have large derangement in their coagulation, making the method and devices of the invention useful for monitoring this patient population.
(67) The method and devices of the invention can be used to guide heparin therapy, among other anticoagulation therapies. For example, the methods of the invention can be carried out with heparinase to assess the coagulation status in the absence of the anticoagulatory effects of heparin. Further, the methods of the invention can be utilized to assess protamine therapy, i.e. to monitor coagulation after protamine therapy and to treat a heparin or protamine induced hemostatic condition. Similarly, analysis could be done pre- and post surgery to determine the anticoagulant or hemostatic status of a surgical patient.
(68) The method and devices of the invention can also be used to guide antiplatelet therapies and identify resistance to antiplatelet therapies. Antiplatelet therapy is increasingly being prescribed for primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease to decrease the incidence of acute cerebro- and cardiovascular events. Antiplatelet drugs typically target to inhibit cyclooxygenase 1/thromboxaneA2 receptors (e.g., aspirin), adenosine diphosphate receptors (e.g., clopidogrel), or GPIIb/IIIa receptors (e.g., abciximab, tirofiban). Although antiplatelet drugs are thought to work primarily by decreasing platelet aggregation, they also have been shown to function as anticoagulants. Because platelets play a key role in overall coagulation, the assessment of the platelet function (more than their number) is critical in the perioperative setting.
(69) The method and devices of the invention can also be used to monitor and/or guide anticoagulant therapies. Anticoagulant therapies (e.g., rivaroxaban, dabigatran, among others) can be monitored for efficacy and compliance, and to ensure avoidance of adverse side effects and/or adverse events (e.g., bleeding events). Dosing adjustments for such therapies have been reported to control bleeding in large, randomized studies. Specifically, dosing of anticoagulants, including direct Factor Xa inhibitors can be used to assist maintenance of a therapeutic window and lead to a reduction of risk of stroke in atrial fibrillation and deep vein thrombosis in patients.
(70) The method and devices of the invention can be used to identify patients resistant to anticoagulant therapy. Anticoagulant therapies include aspirin, plavix, and prasugrel, among other anticoagulants. The method includes (i) administering the anticoagulation therapy to the subject; (ii) evaluating the hemostatic condition of the subject using a method of the invention; and (iii) if the subject is found to be prothrombotic, identifying the subject as a non-responder to the anticoagulation therapy. The identification of non-responders can permit a physician to identify a safe and efficacious anticoagulant to which the patient is responsive, thereby reducing the risk of adverse events (i.e., thrombi formation and stroke).
(71) The method and devices of the invention can be used to monitor procoagulant therapy. The modern practice of coagulation management is based on the concept of specific component therapy and requires rapid diagnosis and monitoring of the pro-coagulant therapy. It has been shown, for example, that platelet transfusion in the perioperative period of coronary artery bypass graft surgery is associated with increased risk for serious adverse events. Clinical judgment alone may not predict who will benefit from a platelet transfusion in the acute perioperative setting. Accordingly, the transfusion of coagulation products should be preferably guided by a point of care test, such as the test provided by the method and devices of the invention.
(72) The method and the devices of the invention can be used to provide a companion diagnostic analysis or test to monitor the effects of a therapeutic compound in a clinical trial or in medical use. The diagnostic analysis may include determining whether or not the subject of the trial or the patient responds to therapy or does not respond to therapy.
(73) The method and the devices of the invention can be used to determine the perfusion through clots, hypercoagulation, hyperclotting, or clotting that is deleterious in a human, as in stroke or cardiac arrest.
(74) The method and the devices of the invention can be used as part of a panel of analyses. The panel can include (i) an immunoassay to proteins that are involved in the coagulation cascade; (ii) an immunoassay to detect fibrin degradation products; (iii) an immune assay to detect antiphospholipid antibodies; (iv) an assay to detect heparin or warfarin or other anticoagulant to assess therapeutic concentration; (v) a PT or aPTT or PTT assay that monitors the plasma prothrombin time; (vi) a genetic test to assess the polymorphic differences in genes encoding proteins that are relevant to (a) the formation or dissolution of thrombin, (b) the coagulation cascade, (c) heparin binding, or (d) therapeutic activity.
(75) The methods and the devices of the invention can be used to manage medical devices with implications towards coagulopathies. An example is a ventricle assist device often used as a bridge for patients awaiting a heart transplant. Patients with such an implant may have clot formation within and outside of the device as a result of the function of the device, and these clots may cause a stroke or another thrombus related event. It may also lead towards infections and bleeding events. A way to avoid these issues is to monitor multiple diagnostic markers that impact the success of the device. For instance, routine testing of PT-INR would allow tighter monitoring of the patients coagulation state, thus, providing tight control of bleeding and clotting events.
(76) The INR is the ratio of a patient's prothrombin time to a normal (control) sample, raised to the power of the International Sensitivity Index value for the analytical system used. A high INR level (e.g., INR=5) indicates that there is a high chance of bleeding, whereas if the INR=0.5 then there is a high chance of having a clot. Normal INR range for a healthy person is 0.9-1.3. For people on warfarin therapy the INR range is typically 2.0-3.0. The target INR may be higher in particular situations, such as for those with a mechanical heart valve, or bridging warfarin with a low-molecular weight heparin (such as enoxaparin (Lovenox)) perioperatively.
(77) Monitoring platelet function, fibrinolysis, clot strength and other factors are equally important in improving outcomes. Understanding the physiologic concentration or activities of these factors are important not just for their interplay with the device, but because they are modulated by the many different therapies often prescribed to patients on these devices (aspirin, rivaroxaban, plavix, warfarin, among others). Another measure that is used with these types of devices is hematocrit, which is often used to adjust the functioning of the device (speed, intensity, etc.) to maintain the function of the heart. The methods and the devices of the invention can provide all of these results (hematocrit, platelet, PT, PT-INR, etc.), potentially simultaneously, and it may provide additional information with respect to clot formation and dissolution. The standard measures above may be combined into an index or signature that identifies the status of the patient and efficacy of the device.
(78) The methods and the devices of the invention can be utilized and configured in multiple ways. They can be used as a laboratory device, point-of-care system, or even an implantable monitoring system. For example, as an implantable monitoring system, the sample can consist of continually monitored blood; a vacutainer with whole blood, serum, or plasma; or a finger stick, among other sample fluids.
(79) For example, the methods and the devices of the invention can be utilized for monitoring peri-operative and trauma patients (e.g., providing measures or surrogate measures for PT/INR, aPTT, ACT, Hct, platelet activity, and fibrinolysis). There is a need with these patient populations to quickly and efficiently determine if a transfusion is needed as the patients can exhibit an approximately 6-fold increase in mortality, ischemic events, infection, early onset of complications, and increased ICU/hospital stays. Specifically, determination of the root cause of bleeding events (coagulation cascade vs. platelet activation) can lead to prompt and focused therapy.
(80) Regardless of the context in which the methods and the devices of the invention are utilized, that the methods of the invention can be used to rapidly measure small volumes is particularly important for platelet function, which previously were difficult to measure using other systems due to the initiation of clotting at the site of the blood draw.
(81) The Clotting Mechanism
(82) For clotting to occur there must be activation of coagulation cascade culminating in fibrin deposition through the action of thrombin on fibrinogen. The coagulation system is composed of a proteolytic cascade that amplifies an initial stimulus with an elegant feedback regulation mechanism to keep the overall process in check and balance. There are two interconnected routes of clotting activation: (i) contact activation (intrinsic pathway); and (ii) tissue factor activation (extrinsic pathway). Both pathways rely on a variety of coagulation factors. Prothrombin is coagulation factor II, thrombin is coagulation factor IIa, fibrinogen is coagulation factor I, and fibrin is coagulation factor Ia. In addition to the coagulation factors, platelets are critical both for the induction and formation of an adequate blood clot. Platelets act as a phospholipid surface upon which prothrombinase complexes are formed and act as a physical scaffold for the developing clot.
(83) The intrinsic coagulation cascade pathway is normally activated by contact with collagen from damaged blood vessels, but many negatively charged surfaces can stimulate this pathway. The intrinsic pathway normally requires platelet activation in order to assemble a tenase complex involving factors VIIIa, IXa, and X. The activation process is linked to the inositol triphosphate (IP3) pathway and involves degranulation and myosin 1c kinase activation in order to change the platelet shape to ultimately allow adherence.
(84) Clotting may alternatively be activated via the extrinsic coagulation cascade pathway which requires a tissue factor from the surface of extravascular cells. The extrinsic pathway involves complex formation of coagulation factors V, VII, and X. The chief inducer of coagulation in vivo is Tissue Factor (TF), a 47 kDa glycoprotein. The only cells capable of expressing TF in the bloodstream are endothelial cells and monocytes. By contrast, many cells outside the bloodstream, including adventitial fibroblasts, constitutively express TF and thus form an extravascular envelope capable of initiating coagulation in the event of a disruption in vascular integrity.
(85) The final stages of the cascade are common to both pathways which involves a tenase complex, the activating complex. Tenase is a contraction of ten and the suffix -ase, signifying that the complex activates its substrate (inactive factor X) by cleaving it. Intrinsic tenase complex contains the active factor IX (IXa), its cofactor factor VIII (VIIIa), the substrate (factor X), and they are activated by negatively charged surfaces (such as glass, active platelet membrane, sometimes cell membrane of monocytes). Extrinsic tenase complex is made up of tissue factor, factor VII, the substrate (factor X) and Ca.sup.2+ as an activating ion.
(86) Activation of factor X, to factor Xa, through either the extrinsic or the intrinsic pathway, leads to the proteolytic conversion of prothrombin to thrombin which, in turn, activates the initiation of the formation of a clot. Factor VIII then catalyzes a transglutaminase reaction to crosslink the fibrin monomers to form a crosslinked network.
(87) The crosslinked fibrin multimers in a clot are broken down to soluble polypeptides by plasmin, a serine protease. Plasmin can be generated from its inactive precursor plasminogen and recruited to the site of a fibrin clot in two ways, by interaction with tissue plasminogen activator at the surface of a fibrin clot, and by interaction with urokinase plasminogen activator at a cell surface. The first mechanism appears to be the major one responsible for the dissolution of clots within blood vessels. The second, although capable of mediating clot dissolution, may normally play a major role in tissue remodeling, cell migration, and inflammation.
(88) Clot dissolution is regulated in two ways. First, efficient plasmin activation and fibrinolysis occur only in complexes formed at the clot surface or on a cell membrane; proteins free in the blood are inefficient catalysts and are rapidly inactivated. Second, both plasminogen activators and plasmin itself are inactivated by specific serpins, proteins that bind to serine proteases to form stable, enzymatically inactive complexes. Pharmacologically, the clot buster tissue plasminogen activator (TPA) and streptokinase or urokinase are used to activate this internal fibrinolytic mechanism.
(89) Medical Conditions
(90) The methods and the device of the invention as herein described may be used for the detection of rheological changes of various liquids, in particular blood samples, for the diagnosis of coagulation, thrombotic disorders, and thrombotic disorders as a result of disease, e.g., sepsis and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), Hemophilia A, Hemophilia B, Hemophilia C, Congenital deficiency of other clotting factors Factor XIII deficiency, Von Willebrand's disease, hemorrhagic disorder due to intrinsic anticoagulants, defibrination syndrome, acquired coagulation factor deficiency, coagulation defects, other, purpura and other hemorrhagic conditions, allergic purpura, Henoch-Schnlein purpura, thrombocytopenia, immune thrombocytopenic purpura, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, secondary thrombocytopenia, and non-specific hemorrhagic conditions.
(91) The cardiovascular system requires tightly regulated hemostasis. Excessive clotting may cause venous or arterial obstructions, while failure to clot may cause excessive bleeding; both conditions lead to deleterious clinical situations. In most human subjects, the clotting balance is more or less static. However, there are many different clinical parameters (such as hereditary disorders, disease states, therapeutic drugs, or pharmacological stressors) that can alter hemostasis and lead to cardiovascular malfunction.
(92) There are many different known coagulation disorders that are a result of non-functional clotting factors, such as hemophilia (factors VIII (hemophilia A), IX (hemophilia B), XI (hemophilia C)), Alexander disease (factor VII deficiency), prothrombin deficiency (factor II deficiency), Owren's disease (factor V deficiency), Stuart-Prower deficiency (factor X deficiency), Hageman factor deficiency (factor XII deficiency), fibrinogen deficiency (factor I deficiency), and von Willebrand's diseases.
(93) The activation of the coagulation cascades appears to be an essential component in the development of multi-organ failure that occurs in end-stage sepsis. Current therapies for sepsis specifically target these cascades for modulation of the progression of the end stages and to prevent organ failure.
(94) The methods and devices of the invention may be used to determine the hematocrit of a blood sample. The hematocrit is a measure of the percent volume occupied by red blood cells in a subject's blood, with normal values for healthy women and men being approximately 36-44% and 41-50%, respectively. The hematocrit depends on both the number of red blood cells in a sample and the size of the red blood cells. The measurement of hematocrit may be useful in establishing a variety of physiological conditions in a subject. Thus, the methods of the invention may be used in the diagnosis of any condition associated with a lower than normal hematocrit or a higher than normal hematocrit. A lower than normal hematocrit may be indicative of anemia, sickle cell anemia, internal bleeding, loss of red blood cells, malnutrition, nutritional deficiencies (e.g., iron, vitamin B12, or folate deficiencies), or over hydration. A higher than normal hematocrit may be indicative of congenital heart disease, dehydration, erythrocytosis, pulmonary fibrosis, polycythemia rubra vera, or abuse of the drug erythropoietin.
(95) The methods of the invention can be used to monitor factors and related coagulopathies associated with disease, disorder or dysfunction such as cancer, autoimmune disorders, lupus erythematosus, Crohn's disease, multiple sclerosis, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, deep vein or arterial thrombosis, obesity, rheumatoid arthritis, Alzheimer's disease, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, congestive heart failure, myocardial infarction, coronary artery disease, endocarditis, stroke, emboli, pneumonia, ulcerative colitis, inflammatory bowel disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma, infections, transplant recipients, liver disease, hepatitis, pancreas disease and disorders, renal disease and disorders, endocrine disease and disorders, obesity, diseases or disorders associated with thrombocytopenia, and medical (stents, implants, major surgery, joint replacements, pregnancy) or therapeutic (cancer chemotherapy) induced coagulopathy/ies, and risk factors such as heavy smoking, heavy alcohol consumption, sedentary lifestyle. The methods of the invention may also be used to evaluate genomic and proteomic changes that affect coagulation and blood properties.
(96) The methods of the invention can also be used to monitor patients being undergoing anti-coagulant and/or anti-platelet therapy. Examples of anti-thrombotics (e.g., thrombolytics, anticoagulants, and antiplatelet drugs) that can be monitored using the methods of the invention include, without limitation, vitamin K antagonists such as acenocoumarol, clorindione, dicumarol, diphenadione, ethyl biscoumacetate, phenprocoumon, phenindione, tioclomarol, and warfarin; heparin group (platelet aggregation inhibitors) such as antithrombin III, bemiparin, dalteparin, danaparoid, enoxaparin, heparin, nadroparin, parnaparin, reviparin, sulodexide, and tinzaparin; other platelet aggregation inhibitors such as abciximab, acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin), aloxiprin, beraprost, ditazole, carbasalate calcium, cloricromen, clopidogrel, dipyridamole, epoprostenol, eptifibatide, indobufen, iloprost, picotamide, prasugrel, ticlopidine, tirofiban, treprostinil, and triflusal; enzymes such as alteplase, ancrod, anistreplase, brinase, drotrecogin alfa, fibrinolysin, procein C, reteplase, saruplase, streptokinase, tenecteplase, and urokinase; direct thrombin inhibitors such as argatroban, bivalirudin, desirudin, lepirudin, melagatran, and ximelagatran; other antithrombotics such as dabigatran, defibrotide, dermatan sulfate, fondaparinux, and rivaroxaban; and others such as citrate, EDTA, and oxalate.
(97) Sepsis and Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation
(98) The methods and devices of the invention can be used to assess the hemostatic condition of subjects suffering from sepsis or disseminated intravascular coagulation.
(99) In sepsis, an overwhelming inflammatory response causes extensive collateral damage to the host's microcirculation. Damage to the endothelium exposes tissue factor and in sepsis, which may occur on a large scale. Tissue factor, in turn, binds to activated factor VII. The resulting complex activates factors IX and X. Factor X converts prothrombin into thrombin, which cleaves fibrinogen into fibrin, inducing the formation of a blood clot. At the same time, the fibrinolytic system is inhibited. Cytokines and thrombin stimulate the release of plasminogen-activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) from platelets and the endothelium. When a clot forms in the human body, it is ultimately broken down by plasmin, which is activated by tissue plasminogen activator (TPA). PAI-1 inhibits TPA. Consequently, subjects suffering from severe sepsis are treated with an anticoagulant such as protein C (blood coagulant factor XIV).
(100) Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) is a complex systemic thrombohemorrhagic disorder involving the generation of intravascular fibrin and the consumption of procoagulants and platelets. The resultant clinical condition is characterized by intravascular coagulation and hemorrhage. DIC is not an illness on its own but rather a complication or an effect of progression of other illnesses and is estimated to be present in up to 1% of hospitalized patients. DIC is always secondary to an underlying disorder and is associated with a number of clinical conditions, generally involving activation of systemic inflammation. DIC has several consistent components including activation of intravascular coagulation, depletion of clotting factors, and end-organ damage. DIC is most commonly observed in severe sepsis and septic shock. Indeed, the development and severity of DIC correlates with mortality in severe sepsis. Although bacteremia, including both gram-positive and gram-negative organisms, is most commonly associated with DIC, other infections including viral, fungal, and parasitic infections may cause DIC. Trauma, especially neurotrauma, is also frequently associated with DIC. DIC is more frequently observed in those patients with trauma who develop the systemic inflammatory response syndrome. Evidence indicates that inflammatory cytokines play a central role in DIC in both trauma patients and septic patients. In fact, systemic cytokine profiles in both septic patients and trauma patients are nearly identical.
(101) DIC exists in both acute and chronic forms. DIC develops acutely when sudden exposure of blood to procoagulants occurs, including tissue factor (tissue thromboplastin), generating intravascular coagulation. Compensatory hemostatic mechanisms are quickly overwhelmed, and, as a consequence, a severe consumptive coagulopathy leading to hemorrhage develops. Abnormalities of blood coagulation parameters are readily identified, and organ failure frequently occurs in acute DIC. In contrast, chronic DIC reflects a compensated state that develops when blood is continuously or intermittently exposed to small amounts of tissue factor. In chronic DIC, compensatory mechanisms in the liver and bone marrow are not overwhelmed, and there may be little obvious clinical or laboratory indication of the presence of DIC. Chronic DIC is more frequently observed in solid tumors and in large aortic aneurysms.
(102) Exposure to tissue factor in the circulation occurs via endothelial disruption, tissue damage, or inflammatory or tumor cell expression of procoagulant molecules, including tissue factor. Tissue factor activates coagulation by the extrinsic pathway involving factor VIIa. Factor VIIa has been implicated as the central mediator of intravascular coagulation in sepsis. Blocking the factor VIIa pathway in sepsis has been shown to prevent the development of DIC, whereas interrupting alternative pathways did not demonstrate any effect on clotting. The tissue factor-VIIa complex then serves to activate thrombin, which, in turn, cleaves fibrinogen to fibrin while simultaneously causing platelet aggregation. Evidence suggests that the intrinsic (or contact) pathway is also activated in DIC, while contributing more to hemodynamic instability and hypotension than to activation of clotting.
(103) Decreased levels of antithrombin correlate with elevated mortality in patients with sepsis. Thrombin generation is usually tightly regulated by multiple hemostatic mechanisms. Antithrombin function is one such mechanism responsible for regulating thrombin levels. However, due to multiple factors, antithrombin activity is reduced in patients with sepsis. First, antithrombin is continuously consumed by ongoing activation of coagulation. Moreover, elastase produced by activated neutrophils degrades antithrombin as well as other proteins. Further antithrombin is lost to capillary leakage. Lastly, production of antithrombin is impaired secondary to liver damage resulting from under-perfusion and microvascular coagulation.
(104) Tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) depletion is evidence in subjects with DIC. TFPI inhibits the tissue factor-VIIa complex. Although levels of TFPI are normal in patients with sepsis, a relative insufficiency in DIC is evident. TFPI depletion in animal models predisposes them to DIC, and TFPI blocks the procoagulant effect of endotoxin in humans. The intravascular fibrin produced by thrombin is normally eliminated via a process termed fibrinolysis. The initial response to inflammation appears to be augmentation of fibrinolytic action; however, this response soon reverses as inhibitors of fibrinolysis are released. High levels of PAI-1 precede DIC and predict poor clinical outcomes. Fibrinolysis cannot keep pace with increased fibrin formation, eventually resulting in under-opposed fibrin deposition in the vasculature.
(105) Protein C, along with protein S, serves in important anticoagulant compensatory mechanisms. Under normal conditions, protein C is activated by thrombin and is complexed on the endothelial cell surface with thrombomodulin. Activated protein C combats coagulation via proteolytic cleavage of factors Va and VIIIa. However, cytokines (e.g., tumor necrosis factor (TNF-) and interleukin 1 (IL-1)) produced in sepsis and other generalized inflammatory states largely incapacitate the protein C pathway. Inflammatory cytokines down-regulate the expression of thrombomodulin on the endothelial cell surface. Protein C levels are further reduced via consumption, extravascular leakage, reduced hepatic production, and by a reduction in freely circulating protein S.
(106) Inflammatory and coagulation pathways interact in substantial ways. Many of the activated coagulation factors produced in DIC contribute to the propagation of inflammation by stimulating endothelial cell release of proinflammatory cytokines. Factor Xa, thrombin, and the tissue factor-VIIa complex have each been demonstrated to elicit proinflammatory action. Furthermore, given the anti-inflammatory action of activated protein C, its impairment in DIC contributes to further dysregulation of inflammation.
(107) Components of DIC include: exposure of blood to procoagulant substances; fibrin deposition in the microvasculature; impaired fibrinolysis; depletion of coagulation factors and platelets (consumptive coagulopathy); organ damage and failure. DIC may occur in 30-50% of patients with sepsis.
(108) The methods and devices of the invention may find use in monitoring subjects with a variety of DIC-associated conditions such as: sepsis/severe infection; trauma (neurotrauma); organ destruction; malignancy (solid and myeloproliferative malignancies); severe transfusion reactions; rheumatologic illness; obstetric complications (amniotic fluid embolism, abruptio placentae, hemolysis, retained dead fetus syndrome); vacular abnormalities (Kasabach-Merritt syndrome, aneurysms); hepatic failure; toxic reactions, transfusion reactions, and transplant rejections. Similarly, the invention may be used with respect to subjects having hemostatic conditions characterized by acute DIC associated with bacterial infections (e.g., gram-negative sepsis, gram-positive infections, or rickettsial), viral infections (e.g., associated with HIV, cytomegalovirus, varicella, or hepatitis), fungal infections, parasitic infection (e.g., malaria), malignancy (e.g., acute myelocytic leukemias), obstetric conditions (e.g., eclampsia placental abruption or amniotic fluid embolism), trauma, burns, transfusion, hemolytic reactions, or transplant rejection.
(109) The NMR-based methods of the invention may be use to monitor any and all of the blood-related conditions described above. Time-domain relaxometry, particularly T2 relaxation measurements, can be used to measure a change in the clotting state of a sample. This measurement relies on measuring NMR parameters of the hydrogen nuclei that are sensitive to changes in the macroscopic clotting state of the sample. Most of the hydrogen nuclei are in the bulk water solvent, but an appreciable fraction of them are in the biological macromolecules and cells and platelets in the sample. As such, the measurement of the average NMR signal from all hydrogen nuclei can be conducted such that the signal changes in an appreciable manner when the clotting state of the sample changes for any of the clinical reasons described above. The NMR measurement can be a T2 relaxation measurement, or an effective T2 relaxation measurement (e.g., a T2 relaxation measurement where the parameters of the signal acquisition are such that they are set for optimal readout of the clotting event and not for the most accurate measurement of a T2 relaxation value). Other time domain relaxation measurement methods can be applied to measure changes in clotting behaviors. These may include time-domain free-induction decay analyses amongst other measurements. Any of the NMR time domain measurements described herein can be acquired in a repeated fashion to get a dynamic read-out of the NMR signal over the course of time as the clotting or dissolution properties of the sample change.
(110) Subjects Having Normal and Abnormal Hemostatic Profiles
(111) The methods of the invention can be used to discriminate between subjects having normal and abnormal hemostatic profiles. For example, the NMR relaxation parameter value and/or T2 signature characteristic of normal and abnormal hemostatic profiles can be determined and used in the differential diagnosis of a subject. Abnormal hemostatic profiles can include profiles for subjects sharing a common deficiency in one or more clotting factors, clotting cofactors, and/or regulatory proteins (e.g., factor XII, factor XI, factor IX, factor VII, factor X, factor II, factor VIII, factor V, factor III (tissue factor), fibrinogen, factor I, factor XIII, von Willebrand factor, protein C, protein S, thrombomodulin, and antithrombin III, among others).
(112) A deficiency in antithrombin is seen in approximately 2% of patients with venous thromboembolic disease. Inheritance occurs as an autosomal dominant trait. The prevalence of symptomatic antithrombin deficiency ranges from 1 per 2000 to 1 per 5000 in the general population. Deficiencies results from mutations that affect synthesis or stability of antithrombin or from mutations that affect the protease and/or heparin binding sites of antithrombin. The methods of the invention can be used to discriminate between normal subjects and subjects having a deficiency in antithrombin.
(113) A deficiency in factor XI confers an injury-related bleeding tendency. This deficiency was identified in 1953 and originally termed hemophilia C. Factor XI deficiency is very common in Ashkenazic Jews and is inherited as an autosomal disorder with either homozygosity or compound heterozygosity. The methods of the invention can be used to discriminate between normal subjects and subjects having a deficiency in factor XI.
(114) von Willebrand disease (vWD) is due to inherited deficiency in von Willebrand factor (vWF). vWD is the most common inherited bleeding disorder of humans. Deficiency of vWF results in defective platelet adhesion and causes a secondary deficiency in factor VIII. The result is that vWF deficiency can cause bleeding that appears similar to that caused by platelet dysfunction or hemophilia. vWD is an extremely heterogeneous disorder that has been classified into several major subtypes. Type I vWD is the most common and is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait. This variant is due to simple quantitative deficiency of all vWF multimers. Type 2 vWD is also subdivided further dependent upon whether the dysfunctional protein has decreased or paradoxically increased function in certain laboratory tests of binding to platelets. Type 3 vWD is clinically severe and is characterized by recessive inheritance and virtual absence of vWF. The methods of the invention can be used to discriminate between normal subjects and subjects having a deficiency in von Willebrand factor.
(115) Several cardiovascular risk factors are associated with abnormalities in fibrinogen. Elevated plasma fibrinogen levels have been observed in patients with coronary artery disease, diabetes, hypertension, peripheral artery disease, hyperlipoproteinemia and hypertriglyceridemia. In addition, pregnancy, menopause, hypercholesterolemia, use of oral contraceptives and smoking lead to increased plasma fibrinogen levels. There are inherited disorders in fibrinogen, including afibrinogenemia (a complete lack of fibrinogen), hypofibrinogenemia (reduced levels of fibrinogen) and dysfibrinogenemia (presence of dysfunctional fibrinogen). Afibrinogenemia is characterized by neonatal umbilical cord hemorrhage, ecchymoses, mucosal hemorrhage, internal hemorrhage, and recurrent abortion. The disorder is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. Hypofibrinogenemia is characterized by fibrinogen levels below 100 mg/dL (normal is 250-350 mg/dL) and can be either acquired or inherited. The methods of the invention can be used to discriminate between normal subjects and subjects having abnormalities in fibrinogen.
(116) Platelet Monitoring
(117) The methods and device of the invention can be used to determine platelet function and be compared to platelet aggregometry (see, e.g., Harris et al., Thrombosis Research 120:323 (2007)). Currently there are two detection methods used in instruments with FDA clearance for performing platelet aggregometry: optical and impedance measurements. For example, the methods of the invention can be used to identify any platelet activity or diagnose any platelet dysfunction in a subject that may be measured by platelet aggregometry. Platelet aggregometry is a functional test performed on a whole blood or platelet-rich plasma sample. Generally, platelet aggregometry methods involve adding a platelet activator to the sample and measuring the induced platelet aggregation. Platelet aggregometry can be performed by immersing an electrode in the blood sample being tested. Platelets adhering to the probe form a stable monolayer. When an activator is added, platelet aggregates form on the electrode and increase the resistance to a current being applied across the electrode. The instrument monitors the change in electrical impedance, which reflects the platelet aggregation response. Aggregometry methods also include techniques based on monitoring the release of ATP from aggregating platelets by luminescence. Optical detection of platelet aggregation is based on the observation that, as platelets aggregate into large clumps, there is an increase in light transmittance. Different aggregation-inducing agents stimulate different pathways of activation and different patterns of aggregation are observed. The main drawback of the optical method is that it is typically performed on PRP, necessitating the separation of platelets from red blood cells and adjustment of the platelet count to a standardized value.
(118) As in platelet aggregometry, the methods of the invention may be used assess the platelet count from a blood sample of a subject or to diagnose a condition of thrombocytopenia (platelet count <150,000/L) or thrombocytosis (platelet count >400,000/L) in a subject. Such a diagnosis may be used as the basis of a decision to provide the subject with a platelet transfusion or an anticoagulant. Similarly, the methods of the invention may be used to evaluate the response of a subject to a platelet transfusion or an anticoagulant.
(119) The following examples are put forth so as to provide those of ordinary skill in the art with a complete disclosure and description of how the methods and compounds claimed herein are performed, made, and evaluated, and are intended to be purely exemplary of the invention and are not intended to limit the scope of what the inventors regard as their invention.
(120) Other Uses
(121) The NMR-based methods of the invention described herein may be used in a variety of applications where a substance or mixture of substances is undergoing or has undergone a clotting process or a dissolution process. The methods of the invention may be used to obtain information on changes within a material undergoing a process or on the state of a material which has already undergone a process.
(122) In the field of petroleum products, the methods of the invention may be used to monitor asphalt/bitumen, bitumen-polymer manufacture, boiler, crude oil, coal ash, coal slurry, cracking, distillation residues, engineering, fluxed bitumen, high viscosity oil, furnace oils, lubricant, mixing fuel oils, oil additives, oil clarificator, blending oils, oils counters (pipeline terminal), oils wear control, plastisols, mineral oils, petroleum additives manufacture, petroleum products, pipe line counters, pitch coating, pitch dilution, pumping of Erika disaster, quench oil, residues transformation in fuel oils, separation of water, sediment and oils, special oils, synthetic rubber, tar control before use, very heavy oil, and water-coal slurries.
(123) In the field of coatings and paint, the methods of the invention may be used to monitor car paint, metallic paint, water paint, special ink for scraping game, special ink for aluminum or plastic surfaces, water ink, PTFE coating, white paper coating, special paper coating, wall paper, glue, varnish, car varnish, special paint for engines, manufacture of ink, photogravure, dye, print board varnish, magnetic ink, magnetic varnish, gloss paint, silvering for mirrors, special varnish for spectacles, and enamel powder.
(124) In the field of food and beverages, the methods of the invention may be used to monitor bechamel sauce manufacture, bread manufacture, chocolate manufacture, dough control, fermentation control, fish solubles (evaporation control), fresh cheese manufacture, gelatin food concentration, ice creams manufacture, jam manufacture, margarine manufacture, mayonnaise manufacture, melted cheese manufacture, milk and cheese research, paraffin coating control, proteins concentration control, proteins for animal food, seaweed gelatin, slop control, stewed fruit, sugar boilers (crystallization control), sugar mixer, surimi paste, synthetic flavors, tomato sauce, vegetable margarine and oil, yeasts, yogurt, beer/yeast Control, dough in a bakery, food additives, gelatins (proteins concentration), milk atomization, yogurt, processed cheese, sweetened juice, salad sauce, food thickener, food additives, enzymes concentration control, freezing fluid control artificial food flavor, tobacco liquor, residual sugar liquor, industrial soups, pudding, milk powder, pet food, livestock food, baby food, evaporated milk, starch gel, fruit paste, and fruit juice.
(125) In the field of industrial chemistry, the methods of the invention may be used to monitor basic resins for paints manufacture, polymer, polymer-bitumen manufacture, polymerization control, polycarbonate, PVC Production, two components resins, fibers and polymers, cable resin, epoxy resin, polyamide resins, chloral methyl resins, PVC, carboxyl methyl cellulose, hydrochloric acid, urethane glue, toluene diisocyanate, MEK toluene, plastic recycling, silicone oils, paste, glue, PBU, ethanol toluol, polycarbonate, polyester resins manufacture, polyether polyol control, polyisobutylene, polymer resins manufacture, polymerised vinyl+toluene, polymerization industry, resins polymerization silicones oils, unsaturated polyester resin, urea-formol resin, glue, polyamide resin, nylon, polypropylene resin, polyethylene, epoxy resin, polyephine wax, dimethyl acetate, phenolic resin, plaster, melamine, and methyl methacrylate.
(126) The methods of the invention may also be used to monitor biochemical products, cellulose acetates, fabric softener, enzymes, gel coatings, pharmaceutical capsules, aerosols, chemicals manufacturing (washing bases), cosmetics manufacture and control, creams, engineering in cosmetics machines, fermentation control, glasses for spectacles, pharmaceuticals, photographic emulsions, shampoo manufacture, tooth paste, UV sensitive varnishes, viscosity control in emulsion, vitamin A, photographic emulsions, videotapes, gels, emulsions, delicate chemistry, fluorescent paste for lighting, hydraulic oils, latex atomization, UV glue, hot melt glue, drilling mud, plastisols, acid concentration, mercury, accumulator acid, detergent, ceramic, slurries, glue, adhesive polymer, calcium carbonate, acrylic glue, lime milk, ammonia+MCB+oil, high viscosity combustible fuels, crude oil counting, mixing of two oils, lubricant oils, animal fat boiler, fuel oil, wastewater concentration, mud concentration, yeast sludge, oil contamination, solvent contamination, distressing control of oil, quench oil, cutting oil, and processes involving a setting tower.
(127) The methods and the devices of the invention can be used as a lead compound and compound validation discovery tool. The methods and devices of the invention can identify variations in the coagulation cascade as a function of intervention in the cascade by one or more candidate compounds, or identify variations outside the coagulation cascade (e.g., platelet morphology) in response to candidate compounds. The methods and devices of the invention can be used to screen compound libraries to identify active agents, as well as pinpoint new mechanisms for disease and treatment. These are likely to be in the coagulation cascade, but many will be targets not usually defined or identified in the cascade. This approach can also be used to identify disease states that are differentiated from known coagulation disorders.
(128) The coagulation system is a highly complex system and available tools for study of this system are limited in the breadth of information that they can provide to scientists engaged in drug discovery. Many current drug discoveries rely on target based screening, while others rely on phenotypic screening. Targeted methods include the use of molecular methods of action, similar to gene expression or RNAi to isolate the target of interest with an assay and then use that assay to search for compounds. Phenotypic screening identifies changes to biology that occur due to a compound or agent, thus characterizing promising leads because they have the desired effect in the body. For cases of inhibition of the target, wild-type constructs of the target can be used. For instances of activation of a target, genetically modified version of the target can be used. This approach addresses one limitation of certain existing screening methods that cannot look the target or the activity of the target in matrices such as whole blood. For targets in hemostasis and coagulation, this can be problematic due to the complex nature of the biological interactions that any given target can undergo in blood. Potential screening targets include proteins, peptides, enzymes, fibrinogen, thrombin, platelets, platelet receptors, diseased state of platelets, clotting factors, diseased state of any of these targets.
(129) The methods and the devices of the invention can generate an information rich data set generated from the clotting of a patient sample blood or plasma due to the addition of a specific initiator. Various initiators can be used to trigger blood clotting at different starting points. These different initiators can be used to isolate or highlight different portions of the clotting cascade by activation at selected points or branches of the cascade and/or inhibition of selected points and/or branches of the cascade. For a given clotting reaction, the methods of the invention enable the generation of a 3D surface data set that captures multiple parameters such as hematocrit levels, clotting time, platelet activity, fibrinolysis, and many other physiological and biological parameters. Thus, specific initiators can be used to explore and isolate specific coagulation pathways.
(130) Another means to select and hone in on a specific part of the coagulation pathway or hemostasis system is to use genetically modified systems, such as knock-out mice or rats. These systems/models allow one to produce a target that represents the diseased state (e.g., a diseased platelet), and applying the methods of the invention to the blood in this system/model in the absence and presence of the candidate compound to evaluate the effectiveness of the compound to ameliorate the disease state. The small sample volume requirement of T2MR may be advantageous to animal studies. Conventional platelet methods require 0.5-25 mL of blood, while the methods of the invention can be carried out using much smaller volumes.
(131) Another advantage of the screening methods of the invention is that numerous features are available to identify anchor points, and sensitivity features for measuring the effects of compounds on the hemostasis process.
(132) The following examples are put forth so as to provide those of ordinary skill in the art with a complete disclosure and description of how the methods and compounds claimed herein are performed, made, and evaluated, and are intended to be purely exemplary of the invention and are not intended to limit the scope of what the inventors regard as their invention.
EXAMPLE 1
Monitoring the Blood Clotting Process Using Whole Blood Samples
(133) The clotting process was monitored using fresh citrated or heparinized whole blood samples. Several different activation pathways were examined.
(134) For the kaolin activation pathway (CK pathway), 1 mL of citrated blood was added to a kaolin vial (PlateletMapping assay kit, Haemonetics). The vial was inverted five times to mix the sample. 34 L of the blood/kaolin mix was transferred into a 200 L PCR tube pre-heated at 37 C. 2 L of the 0.2M CaCl.sub.2 was added to the PCR tube and the T2 measurement was started immediately.
(135) For the activator pathway (A pathway), 1 L of freshly prepared activator solution (A-P1, PlateletMapping assay kit, Haemonetics, also referred to herein as RF) was added to a 200 L PCR tube pre-heated at 37 C. 36 L of blood collected in a heparinase vial was added to the PCR tube and the sample was mixed with a pipette tip 3-4 times. The T2 measurement was started immediately.
(136) For the Activator (RF)+ADP pathway, 1 L of freshly prepared activator solution (A-P1, PlateletMapping assay kit, Haemonetics) and 1 L of freshly prepared platelet agonist solution (ADP-P2, PlateletMapping assay kit, Haemonetics) were added to a 200 L PCR tube pre-heated at 37 C. 36 L of blood collected in heparinase vial was added to the PCR tube and the sample was mixed with a pipette tip 3-4 times. The T2 measurement was started immediately.
(137)
EXAMPLE 2
Data Extraction Using an Algorithm for Interpreting Blood Clotting in a Sample
(138) The data output from the T2reader of Example 1 was processed using a three-step method of performing a bi-exponential fit, plotting and checking, and feature extraction:
(139) Bi-Exponential Fit
(140) The read time was registered by NDXClient. The complex y data was converted to magnitude and normalized. The initial 25 milliseconds of x and y was removed. Each relaxation curve was fit using the default non-linear least square method. The curves were fitted to a bi-exponential equation using start points (e.g., seeds) for AmpA, AmpB, T2A, and T2B with fixed seeds used for the first five time points. The seed for the sixth time point was obtained from the average of the first five time points. Generally, time points were seeded with output from the previous time point. Negative values for parameters were not allowed. Alternatively, the data can be fit initially in the middle of the time series, working similarly to the ends. The goodness-of-fit term was computed by taking the sum of squares of the fit residuals, excluding non-negative values, called SSE (see
(141) Plotting and Checking
(142) The fits that did not meet the SSE criteria were flagged and removed. A simple smoothing function based on local regression using weighted LLS and 1 degree polynomials was performed and outlier data was discarded. Each fit parameter was plotted versus time (smoothed and unsmoothed). Data shift and reflections were conducted to mimic TEG tracing and produce a T2Coagulation curve. T2Coagulation curves may be produced by applying a linear transformation to the extracted magnetic resonance parameters. In particular, a T2Coagulation curve could be obtained from T2A data by subtracting the minimum T2A value from each of the data points and taking the negative of each resulting data point, effectively reflecting the curve about the x axis. Likewise, a T2Coagulation curve could be obtained from T2B data by subtracting the maximum T2B value from each of the data points and taking the negative of each resulting data point, effectively reflecting the curve about the x axis. The amplitude data AmpA and AmpB could be transformed into a T2Coagulation curve by similar methods.
(143) Extract Features
(144) The plotted curves were measured to extract the values associated with clotting behaviors R, MA, and angle. Data extraction can be carried out using any of a variety of methods known in the art. For example, metrics can be derived from the curve shape of the resulting data and/or calculated from the value of one or more NMR parameters.
EXAMPLE 3
Use of a Capillary Method for Measuring Clotting Behaviors
(145) A capillary tube was used to collect a 2- to 5-p L blood sample from a patient. The blood sample was collected from a fingerstick using a lance, and the sample was collected into a heparinized capillary tube and capped with clay. Alternatively the blood was collected in a pyrex tube and capped with clay. Alternatively the blood sample was collected in a glass Dagan capillary tube and capped with clay and did not contain an activator. Data for T2 NMR relaxation rate was recorded from the capillary sample using a T2reader. It was determined that the collected data was monoexponential and that this may reflect a different clot structure than is present in standard CK curves. Presumably, the surface of the capillary induces blood clotting.
EXAMPLE 4
Treatment of Blood with Nanoparticles
(146) Doping of blood with superparamagnetic nanoparticles leads to a change in the susceptibility of the bulk water in blood. A similar phenomenon has been previously used by adding manganese to blood to alter the T2 values of bulk water and enable a chemical-shift enabled exchange measurement of water inside and outside of the red blood cells. Blood samples from a single patient were used for experiments based on the protocol set forth in Example 1. Additionally, blood samples were treated with unfunctionalized 800 nm diameter nanoparticles. Two different concentrations of nanoparticles were tested. The two different concentrations were achieved by adding either 10 L of nanoparticles or 20 L of nanoparticles. T2 data was recorded using a T2reader. The recorded T2 data was processed using the algorithm described in Example 2. From a series of plots of AmpA and AmpB for samples containing nanoparticles, it was observed that the nanoparticles reduced the noise observed in the curves, permitting AmpA and AmpB to be distinguished more easily. From a series of plots of T2A and T2B for samples containing nanoparticles, it was observed that the nanoparticles produced a larger change in T2A. Superparamagnetic nanoparticles can be useful in the methods of the invention for (i) increasing signal change (or the change in the value of an NMR parameter) in response to rheological changes in a sample, and/or (ii) permitting a earlier detection of changes in rheology in a sample undergoing a clotting or dissolution process.
(147) In a separate experiment, the effect of the size of the superparamagnetic particle on T2MR in clotting blood was observed. Blood samples were prepared by combining 1 mL of citrated whole blood with 1 tube of Kaolin reagent from (TEG) with gentle mixing by inversion 5 times. 34 L of blood/kaolin mixture was placed in a PCR tube (200 L) and preheated at 37 C. for 1 minute. Clotting was initiated by addition of 2 L of 0.2M CaCl.sub.2, and the tube was placed into a T2 reader. Samples were run without magnetic particles (see
(148) Addition of 30 nm nanoparticles erases the clot signal (at T2=200 msec) in a typical citrated kaolin experiment, only 1 peak at T2100 msec is present. Addition of 730 nm superparamagnetic particles does not interfere with the ability to observe both peaks.
EXAMPLE 5
Determination of Magnetic Resonance Parameters Value from Donor Blood Samples
(149) The magnetic resonance parameters used for data extraction were obtained using blood samples obtained from donors. The blood samples were evaluated using both the TEG method and the T2Coagulation method. Several different types of assays were run. The T2Coagulation data was collected using one of a number of T2readers.
(150) Whole Blood Clotting Assays
(151) Donor blood samples were evaluated using the method of the invention and the TEG method. As described in Example 1, a number of different whole blood clotting assays were used. These assays are further summarized in Table 1.
(152) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Whole blood clotting assays and activators tested TEG Assay Blood Type Anticoagulent Activator(s) Comments Kaolin citrate kaolin (clay) which part of the Activation generates thrombin, TEG platelet (K or CK) the most potent mapping assay platelet activator and clotting activator Activator heparin reptilase and part of the (RF) factor XIII TEG platelet mapping assay; excludes plate- let contribution to clotting ADP heparin adenosine diphosphate part of the Agonist TEG platelet (ADP) mapping assay AA heparin arachidonic acid part of the Agonist TEG platelet (AA) mapping assay Functional citrate tissue factor excludes Fibrinogen and platelet the platelet Test (FF) inhibiting agent contribution to clotting
(153) The K test generates a clot by both platelet activation and the enzymatic cascade that leads to fibrin formation. This clot bypasses any types of platelet inhibitor drugs and provides an assessment of overall whole blood coagulation. It is thought that the TEG R value provides a reflection of the enzymatic pathway and the TEG MA value provides a reflection of the clot strength, which is driven by both platelets and the product of the enzymatic pathway, the fibrin network
(154) RF, ADP, and AA tests use heparin to inhibit the thrombin pathway to isolate the pathway activated by each specific agonist. ADP and AA activate platelets, and there is an additional contribution to clot strength by formation of the fibrin network. The RF run doesn't activate platelets but does activate the fibrin network. Therefore, when the MA from an RF run is subtracted from a K, ADP, or AA run, the contribution of platelets to MA of those respective runs can be determined. It is noteworthy that this is an indirect measure of platelet function.
(155) Running K and ADP blood clotting assays on a patient can be used to determine the amount of platelet inhibition a patient is under due to an anti-platelet therapy such as Plavix, Ticlid, and Effient, which are ADP platelet inhibitors. The TEG MA values for K and ADP runs are compared to determine this inhibition.
(156) Running K and AA blood clotting assays can be used to determine the percentage of platelets that are inhibited by an anti-platelet therapy, such as aspirin, ReoPro, Aggrastat, Integrilin, and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. These drugs all inhibit the GPIIb/IIIa platelet receptor, which is the receptor activated by the agonists in AA. This is done by comparing the MA values for K and AA. The GPIIb/IIIa receptors are expressed on the platelet surface when platelets are activated (Corporation, H., TEG 5000 System Guide to PlateletMapping Assay 2010; Enriquez, L. J. and L. Shore-Lesserson, Point-of-care coagulation testing and transfusion algorithms. Br J Anaesth, 2009. 103 Suppl 1: p. i14-22; Kroll, M. H., Thromboelastography: Theory and Practice in Measuring Hemostatis. Clinical Laboratory News, 2010: p. 8-10).
(157) The FF test excludes the platelet contribution to clotting. Subtraction of the FF MA from the K MA yields clot strength presumably due to platelet contribution. This is an indirect measure of platelet function. Comparing the MA from FF and K tests to reference ranges can indicate if a bleeding problem comes from a low platelet or a low functional fibrinogen activity, thereby guiding the clinician to appropriate treatments. Similarly, prothrombotic patients can be diagnosed with either high platelet activity or high functional fibrinogen activity, or both. Fibrinogen is an important component of both primary and secondary hemostatis, participating in both reversible and irreversible platelet aggregation. In secondary hemostasis, fibrinogen is cleaved and converted to fibrin to form the fibrin matrix (Corporation, H., Guide to Functional Fibrinogen. 2009).
EXAMPLE 6
Process for Feature Extraction
(158) An extensive effort was completed to determine the feature correlation between T2Coagulation and TEG curves. The two primary features in the TEG curves for which correlations were sought were R and maximum amplitude (MA). All feature extraction was performed using T2A, T2B, AmpA, and AmpB curves that were smoothed across 1/15 of the total curve, or over every 40 data points.
(159) Feature searching was based on several time points in the T2Coagulation curves. All features of a curve were built from the top candidate for R, which was determined by the time at which the second derivative of the T2A curve reaches a maximum value, by means of a simple numerical calculation. This point in time is referred to as PossibleR. Also used in feature extraction were the time at which T2B is at a minimum or maximum value, and the time at which T2A is at a minimum or maximum value.
(160) There can be spurious data points, particularly in the first and second derivatives. So the minimum and maximum values were defined as the extreme points nearest the first time T2A achieves a maximal second derivative. After identifying these time-points in the T2Coagulation curves and in the first and second derivatives of the T2Coagulation curves, several different features were calculated from the time-points, combinations of time-points, numerical derivatives, and differences in T2Coagulation curves. These features were compared to the TEG R, MA, and MA.sub.PLATELET values.
(161) Standard regression analyses were used to determine the strength of feature correlation. Two terms were used to aid in the search for features, the Pearson product moment correlation (r) coefficient and the coefficient of determination (R.sup.2) term. The r term was used as a general guide in mining for promising correlations and the R.sup.2 term was used as a measure of how good the correlation actually was.
(162) Over 90 features were tested. Example features include the value of the first numerical derivative at PossibleR; the slope of T2A at the maximum acceleration of T2A; the difference between the maximum and minimum values on the T2B curves; and the slope between the minimum T2A and maximum T2A values.
(163) T2A+Partial T2B Curves
(164) In one example of feature extraction, the T2A and T2B curves can be combined to give a T2A+partial T2B curve that was useful in searching for a correlation between the T2Coagulation curves and the TEG MA value. This combined curve was designated as T2A+pT2B and calculated by identifying the point in time where T2B is at a maximum and creating a vector that consists of the absolute value of the difference between that T2B value and all subsequent T2B values. This vector is then added to T2A on the same time register.
(165) The T2A+pT2B curves, generated as described above, generated a potential correlation with TEG MA. A feature was identified that consisted of the change in T2 signal between the T2 at T2 R and the average T2 over the final 50 points on the T2A+pT2B curve. This feature followed an inverse correlation with MA, which was consistent with our initial impression for an MA correlation (see
(166) Pre-Clot T2A Value
(167) The hematocrit of a blood sample could be calculated from the single, initial water population in the sample prior to clotting. Prior to clot formation, this single water population corresponds to the T2A values established using the bi-exponential fit method described in Example 2. The initial T2A value of a sample was found to have an approximately inverse linear correlation with the hematocrit measured using standard methods known in the art. A calibration curve was established by creating a set of four standards at different dilutions using blood drawn from a single patient. The hematocrit and the initial relaxation rate observed for water population A prior to clot initiation were plotted against one another to generate the calibration curve. Blood samples were drawn from ten patients and queried against the calibration curve. The T2 signal for unclotted blood was found to vary inversely with hematocrit (HCT) levels. As shown in
EXAMPLE 7
Correlation Between Extracted Magnetic Resonance Parameters and Clotting Behaviors Determined by TEG
(168) The magnetic resonance parameters extracted from the measured average NMR relaxation rate data may be correlated with clotting behaviors determined by TEG. Table 2 illustrates the correlation between the extracted T2A values and the clotting time parameter R measured using a TEG Hemostatis Analyzer.
(169) The TEG Hemostasis Analyzer provides quantitative and qualitative measurements of the physical properties of a clot (Samara et al., Thromb. Res. 115:89-94, 2005). In the present example, the maximum amplitude (MA) and the coagulation time (R) were measured for the thrombin generated clot sample. MA is an indicator of the viscoelasticity of clot formation or clot strength and is dependent on platelet aggregation and fibrin formation and polymerization. R is the period of time of latency until initial fibrin formation and has been correlated with the velocity of thrombin generation.
(170) From plots of AmpA and AmpB measurements, T2A measurements, and T2B measurements it was observed that early portions of the extracted data curves may provide indications of a clotting behavior (e.g., fibrinolysis or LY30) that is not available from the corresponding TEG curves.
(171) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Correlation between extracted magnetic resonance parameters and clotting behaviors determined by TEG (data shown in minutes) R values Sample TEG T2Coagulation 1 6.9 6.5 2 7.3 7.5 3 5.5 6.0 4 6.6 7.0 5 5.2 6.0 6 7.8 8.0 7 4.9 5.0
(172) T2Coagulation Correlation for Clotting Time (R)
(173) A method of correlating the clotting time (R) with a T2Coagulation feature was developed based on obtaining the second numerical derivative of T2A in an automated way, as discussed above. Across 25 runs, a R.sup.2 of 0.80 (
(174) T2Coagulation Correlation for Platelet-Associated Clot Strength (MA.sub.PLATELET)
(175) Several features were explored for correlating TEG MA times and T2Coagulation features using kaolin runs. The most prominent correlation found for kaolin runs was the T2Coagulation feature between time zero and the minimum T2 value, which is right before the T2 R feature. This is the typical initial decrease in the T2A curves. The slope of the T2A signal between time zero and the minimum T2 value correlates with the TEG MA.sub.PLATELET value. Because TEG cannot measure the platelet activity directly, the thrombin-induced platelet contribution to clot strength is derived by subtracting the MA term from an activator, or A, run (MA.sub.A) from the MA term from a kaolin run (also referred to as MA.sub.THROMBIN).
(176) T2Coagulation Correlation for Functional Fibrinogen-Associated Clot Strength (MA.sub.FF)
(177) Clotting behaviors may be determined by including additives in a blood sample prior to collection of NRM relaxation data. Fibrinogen can be added to a sample to effectively titrate the range of MA values.
(178) T2Coagulation Correlation for Percent Lysis 30 Minutes after MA (LY30)
(179) A correlation was observed for the LY30 term that is used to detect fibrinolysis. Five different healthy patient samples were used to test whether T2Coagulation was sensitive to fibrinolysis. Addition of tissue plasminogen activator (TPA) was used to simulate fibrinolysis by adding it at two levels to healthy patient blood. TPA cleaves fibrin as it forms. It was observed that fibrinolysis can be detected within 10 minutes on T2Coagulation, which is less than half the time required for detection on TEG. For all five patients there was a clear difference between healthy and fibrinolytic samples.
(180) There is a strong correlation for the change in the T2B signal and the LY30 term from TEG, as shown in
(181) Clotting Time, PT/INR, and aPTT
(182) The sensitivity of T2MR to clot formation in blood and plasma can be used to measure clotting times, such as PT/INR, aPTT, and TEG R.
(183) Clotting times were measured by T2MR by first establishing a time zero T2 value (i.e., by taking the first point or some sort of average or linear fit to the first 5-10 data points) of the T2 time curve, and second identifying the time point (i.e., the clotting time or PT time) in the T2 time curve when the T2 value had changed by a predetermined amount (e.g. 5% or 10%) indicative of clotting in the sample. From the observed PT clotting time the INR was calculated using the methods described in Jan et al., Clin. Chem. 35:840 (1989).
(184) A correlation for PT/INR with Stago was demonstrated using thromboplastin reagent (Thrombotest, Axis Shield) and 1:5 dilution of whole blood for T2MR and the standard reagents and plasma protocol for Stago Start system (see
EXAMPLE 8
T1 Relaxation Measurements
(185) In addition to being able to measure T2 measurements, T2readers can be configured to measure T1 measurements. T1 measures different physical properties of the hydrogen atom spin system in the sample. Therefore, T1 data provides alternative and complementary information about blood clotting compared to T2 data. While conventional T1 measurements are time consuming (2-3 minutes) due to the step-wise nature of acquiring the T1 signal, a z-refocused echo (ZRE) method was used to acquire T1 within less than 5 seconds. Measurements of T1 relaxation curves for native and clotted whole blood we made and a sensitivity of T1 to blood clotting was observed (unclotted whole blood T1=787 ms; clotted whole blood T1=860 ms).
EXAMPLE 9
T1/T2 Hybrid Detection Methods
(186) T1/T2 hybrid detection methods are known in the art (Edzes, J. Magn. Reson. 17: 301-313, 1975; Sezginer et al., J. Magn. Reson. 92: 504-527, 1991, which are hereby incorporated by reference). These methods and related methods may be used in the present invention to assess magnetic resonance parameters values and/or establish T2Coagulation curves.
(187) T1 is typically sampled by means of an inversion-recovery sequence. Inversion recovery sequences can take several minutes to acquire depending on the precision of the measured relaxation time that the user wants to achieve, which is dictated by the number of data measurements used in the pulse sequence. The details of the inversion recovery sequence will not be described here, as they can be looked up in any standard NMR textbook.
(188) A T1ZRE pulse sequence allows for the measurement of T1 over the time required for the magnetization to completely relax. (3-5T1). This is achieved by inverting the magnetization with a 180 pulse and then sampling the magnetization while the magnetization returns to equilibrium by measuring its magnitude and returning it to its original z position with a series of pulses.
(189) The time that it takes to sample the magnetization is called .sub.c, and the time between samplings is .sub.r. The time after the start of .sub.c until the actual measurement is .sub.m. The measured relaxation constant is a combination of R.sub.2 and R.sub.1 and is referred to as R.sub.12. The three terms are related by
R.sub.12=(1p)R.sub.1+pR.sub.2(11)
where p=.sub.c/.sub.r. From this relation, one can see that R12 goes to R1 when p goes to 0.
(190) .sub.r will depend on the total number of points and the total duration of the measurement. For T2Coagulation measurements, it was 30 points over 3 seconds for a T.sub.r of 100 milliseconds. The .sub.c term can be calculated from the pulse sequence and is essentially equivalent to 3tau or 750 Accordingly, the p term is equal to 0.0075 and the measured relaxation, or hybrid, T1/T2 (hT12) term should primarily be T1. Sezginer et al. provide a simple equation to derive the T1 measurement from the hT12 signal, which is
(191)
where T.sub.1.sup.meas is hT12, T.sub.1 is T1, T.sub.b is the duration between the two measurements, t.sub.cp is half of the inter-echo delay or tau, and T.sub.2 is the measured T2 time.
(192) The above description is simply illustrative of how this hybrid relaxation time can be measured. There are other pulse sequences that can be used to measure hybrid relaxation constants and derive T1 in a rapid fashion.
(193) Regardless of the pulse sequence used, the inventive concept is directed to rapid acquisition of magnetic resonance relaxation measurements for monitoring coagulation (i.e., blood clotting). Other types of magnetic resonance pulse sequences can be used to monitor the bulk hydrogen signal in the sample during coagulation. Examples include T2, T1, T1/T2 hybrid times, their inverse terms of R2, R1, R12, and pulsed NMR measurements commonly used for materials analyses on relaxometers such as free induction decay (FID) based analyses, fast Fourier transform based analyses (FFT). FID analysis commonly discriminates between rapidly decaying signals and slowly decaying signals. The intensities of these two signals can be compared, as can their decay constants. These pulse sequences have been commonly used for fat analysis, fat content and solid to liquid ratio, solid fat to liquid ratio, hydrogen content determination, oil content, solids content, and total fat content determinations, oil water emulsions, and fat and moisture determinations. Similar real-time or kinetic measurements can be performed with those NMR parameters on samples that are undergoing a coagulation reaction.
(194) Alternative relaxation measurements are attractive to provide: (1) more information of the clotting process; (2) specific information not captured by the T2 measurement; and (3) normalization for factors that both T2 and the new parameter are sensitive to. To describe point 3 more, if, for example, T1 measurements are sensitive to variations in patient to patient but T1 does not contain the coagulation information then there should be an algorithm to use the T1 curve to subtract out the part of the T2 signal that arises from undesired sensitivities in clinical samples. Such undesired sensitivities may be variations in hematocrit, platelet count, etc.
(195) To demonstrate the concept, we measured a CK clotting curve on a Bruker minispec. The experiment was conducted in a sample volume of 300 L and inside of a glass NMR tube. This relaxometer had a pulse sequence that could measure both T2 and hybrid T12 (hT12) relaxation times in a rapid successive fashion. T1 was derived by equation 12.
(196) The resulting T2Coagulation curves showed very similar shape and features to the T2Coagulation curves acquired on the T2readers used in the invention. This is confirmation of the other T2Coagulation curves because the Bruker minispec used has a very different detection coil, magnet, and curve fitting algorithm than the T2readers. Under the described pulse sequence conditions the T1/T2 hybrid is primarily T1. In this experiment the T1/T2 hybrid signal was acquired in an interleaved fashion. A T2 signal was acquired using a CPMG sequence and then the T1/T2 signal was acquired using the T1ZRE sequence. The signals can be combined with each other to generate new curves calculated by dividing the T1/T2 hybrid (primarily T2) by T2A and useful in the methods of the invention for assessing hypercoagulability and/or hypocoagulability of a blood sample.
EXAMPLE 10
Acrylamide Synthetic Clotting Control
(197) An acrylamide gel polymerization was used as a synthetic control for T2Coagulation measurements. A set of acrylamide gels were prepared using deionized water, 40% acrylamide, 0.5 M Tris pH 6.8 buffer, and 10% ammonium persulfate in the amounts listed in Table 3 to form a set of mixtures. The mixtures were incubated at room temperature for 30 minutes. 36 L of each mixture was saved in a set of separate PCR tubes for use as controls. 2 L of tetramethylethylenediamine (TEMED) was added to each mixture. After 30 minutes, a T2 measurement of each control and polymerization reaction was taken.
(198) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Composition of acrylamide gels Sample 3% 6% 10% 15% 20% 40% Deionized water (L) 1310 1160 960 710 460 40% Acrylamide (L) 150 300 500 750 1000 2000 0.5M Tris pH 6.8 buffer (L) 500 500 500 500 500 10% Ammonium persulfate 20 20 20 20 20 20 (L)
(199) The percent change in T2 was calculated by comparing the T2 values of the TEMED treated sample and the corresponding control sample. The measured data is shown in Table 4.
(200) TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 Percent change in T2 times of acrylamide gels Sample Control, T2 msec Polymerized, T2 msec % T2 change 3% 1386.3 1351.16 3 6% 1339.31 1107.84 17 10% 1326.36 828.29 38 15% 1355.67 604.56 55 20% 1235.29 450.85 64 40% 1200.66 145.87 88
(201) The 15%, 20%, and 40% acrylamide gels demonstrated the largest % T2 changes. These reactions were chosen for time course T2 measurements. The 15%, 20%, and 40% acrylamide gels were prepared according to Table 3. Upon addition of TEMED, each sample was immediately placed into a T2 T2reader and measurement was started. The time course data revealed that the overall change in T2 and speed of reaction depends on the percent acrylamide. This is a reflection of the different polymer densities for these different reactions. The sensitivity of T2 to the polymer gel composition is likely due to the sensitivity of T2 to a change in the average length of water diffusion during the time course of a single T2 measurement.
(202) Superparamagnetic nanoparticles can be used with synthetic clotting reactions (e.g., the acrylamide gel formation). When, the 40% acrylamide gel was polymerized in the presence of 800 nm carboxy Sera-mag nanoparticles (1 g/mL nanoparticles), the initial part of the T2 time curve was flattened. The CPMG parameters used in the T2 measurements described above are as follows: pulse width=6.8 s; radiofrequency blanking width=1 s; 90-180 spacing=249.6 s; num 180s=7000; total excitation=3494.902 ms; repetition (Tr)=1000 ms; receiver phase=0; 90 phase=0; and 180 phase=90.
(203) This example is illustrative of how an NMR parameter (e.g., T1 or T2) changes in a sample undergoing a phase change. Increasing the polymer density resulted in a more rapid decrease in T2 and an overall greater decrease in T2, demonstrating the dependence of the T2 signal on polymer matrix density, pore size, and other parameters of the gel Similar results can be obtained with other gels such as Kappa carrageenan gel (gels with the addition of potassium ions), Iota carrageen gel (gels with the addition of calcium ions), sodium calcium alginate, gelatin, among other food products.
EXAMPLE 11
Detection of Bacterial Endotoxin
(204) The methods and device of the invention are used to detect bacterial endotoxin, i.e., cell wall material from gram-negative bacteria. Endotoxin is capable of causing high fevers in humans, and, consequently, injectable drugs and medical devices that contact the blood are frequently tested for the presence of endotoxin. A clotting-based assay for detecting endotoxin relies upon the reaction between bacterial endotoxin and a specific lysate used in the assay. A lysate derived from the circulating amebocytes of the horseshoe crab Limulus polyphemus is a particular lysate that can be used. In the assay, the lysate is introduced to a sample to be tested for the presence of endotoxin. If a gel is formed, via a clotting process, endotoxin is deemed to be present. The formation and properties of such a gel are monitored by any of the NMR-based methods described herein.
EXAMPLE 12
T2 Signature Curves
(205) NMR data is processed to create a T2 signature curve displaying distinct signals (i.e. maxima) that represent individual water populations within a blood sample. The T2 signature curves are created by applying a mathematical transform (e.g., a Laplace transform or inverse Laplace transform) to a decay curve associated with T2 at a time point during a clotting event.
(206) The correlation between the water populations A and B observed in the NMR relaxation data and the components of the clotted sample was confirmed by separating the retracted clot from the surrounding serum and separately measuring the T2 data for these two components (see
(207) The difference between T2A and T2B (Delta T2) was observed to be correlated with clot strength.
EXAMPLE 13
3D Plot of Water Populations in a Clot
(208) T2 relaxation rate data was collected from CK blood samples drawn from healthy patients. For each sample, a series of T2 decay curves were measured over a period of 50 minutes. The decay curves were each processed using an inverse Laplace transform (ILT CONTIN) to provide an array of curves showing T2 intensity as a function of T2 time. These curves were compiled to form 3D data sets by stacking the inverse Laplace transform curves over the duration of the clotting time dimension to generate a 3D surface that shows how the different populations of water within the sample change as a function of time.
EXAMPLE 14
Inhibition of Platelet Activity Using Abciximab
(209) The clotting of a whole blood sample was perturbed using the antithrombotic agent abciximab (ReoPro). Abciximab is the Fab fragment of a human-murine monoclonal antibody that binds to the IIb/IIIa receptor of human platelets and inhibits platelet aggregation. Abciximab serves to inhibit the retraction of a clot during the clotting process.
(210) Samples containing abciximab were prepared according to the following procedure and referenced in the application and Figures by a number corresponding to the concentration of abciximab in units of g/mL.
(211) 1. Blood was drawn from normal donors into six citrate tubes. Normal donors must not have taken aspirin or any anti-platelet drug in the past two weeks.
(212) 2. The six tubes of blood were pooled and mixed gently by inversion eight to ten times. Samples were used within two hours of collection.
(213) 3. A abciximab solution (10 mg/5 mL) was diluted at a ratio of 1:4 using saline as a diluent to form solution 1.
(214) 4. The blood was spiked with solution 1 and saline according to Table 5
(215) 5. The samples were allowed to sit for at least five minutes prior to running any sample in a T2reader or Bruker minispec.
(216) TABLE-US-00005 TABLE 5 Preparation of blood samples containing abciximab l Solution 1 l Saline l Blood Reopro (g/ml) 0 96 1904 0 2 62 1936 0.50 4 60 1936 1 6 58 1936 1.5 8 56 1936 2 10 54 1936 2.5 12 52 1936 3 16 48 1936 4 24 40 1936 6 32 32 1936 8
(217) In a first experiment, four aliquots of patient sample 29488 were prepared with different concentrations of abciximab (0, 2, 4, and 8 g/mL) prior to initiation of the clotting process. The T2 relaxation times for the four samples were measuring over the course of clot formation and the corresponding 3D plots were determined using the technique described in Example 13. A clear trend was evident in the four 3D plots, with higher concentrations of abciximab resulting in the coalescing of the retracted clot water population and the serum water population into a single water population. At the highest concentration of abciximab, there was no longer two phases visible within the clot. This physical change is evidenced and quantified in the corresponding 3D plots (
(218) In a second experiment, five aliquots of patient sample 29494 were prepared with different concentrations (0, 2, 4, 8, and 0 g/mL) of abciximab prior to initiation of the clotting process. The T2 relaxations times for the samples were measured in series, with each set of measurements lasting approximately 50 min. The first sample tested and the final sample tested contained no added abciximab. The collected T2 decay curves were processed using inverse Laplace transforms, as described in Example 18. The data at a time of 0.1 minutes for the five samples is shown in
(219)
EXAMPLE 15
Assessing Data Quality and Fit Quality
(220) The T2 coagulation data for a single sample consists of a collection of S observed T2 CPMG relaxation curves {.sub.j(t): 0<t<T,j=0, 1, 2, 3, . . . S}, where j=0, 1, 2, . . . , S are points in time throughout a sample's coagulation/clot forming process, with j=0 corresponding to clot initiation and j=S a point after the sample has undergone an expected coagulation event. The T2 coagulation algorithm transforms this collection of decay functions into a surface of decay constant potentials over the T2Clotting Time domain and then extracts useful information about the sample from these potentials.
(221) A single T2 CPMG relaxation data .sub.j(t) will be modeled as a finite sum of weighted exponential decay functions using equation (3). Typically n is large (e.g., n>300) due to sample complexity. Many algorithms have been developed to estimate this model's parameters (see Istratov et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 70:1233 (1999)). For example, the Tikhonov regularization method (see Tikhonov Soy. Math. Dokl. 4:1035 (1963)) can implemented in CONTIN (see Provencher, Comput. Phys. Commun 27:229 (1982)) to evaluate the relaxation data collected in the methods of the invention. As is common (see Davies, Inversion Problems in Scattering and Imaging, edited by M. Bertero and E. R. Pike (Adam Hilfer, Bristol, 1992), p. 393), the use of this inversion method for T2 coagulation relaxation data can require the application of specific modifications or settings, such as those provided below.
(222) The inverse Laplace transform is known to be an ill-posed computation, which means that many equally accurate solutions may arise from a given complex decay dataset. This is true of the cleanest data, and worsens as the composite decay curve becomes noisier or moves markedly from a sum of mono-exponential decay functions.
(223) CPMG Data Quality
(224) To address this problem, prior to inversion, each T2 CPMG dataset can be tested to establish the quality of the both the data and the overall likelihood that the inversion will be successful. Signal to noise ratios (SNRs) are estimated based on the CPGM intensity at t=0 compared to the variation observed late in the relaxation data, i.e. t near T. Low SNR values resulting from decreases in initial signal are associated with instrument and operator error that disqualify the data from consideration. Low SNR can also arise from increased variation late in the CPMG data or when the observation duration of the decay process was too short. The latter case suggests the decay constants in a given dataset are larger than expected. Since the Tikhonov regularization method requires knowledge of the maximum T2 value expected, the T2 algorithms accommodate cases of low SNR due to linear trends late in the CPMG curve by increasing the maximum expect T2 value (parameter in CONTIN).
(225) Increased variation also arises when a small number of extreme points (relative to the composite decay assumption) can be found in the tail of a CPMG curve. After fitting subsections of a CPMG curve (0<t1<t<t2<T) with mono-exponential decay functions, points found in the positive or negative tails of the distribution of fit residuals are removed prior to inversion.
(226) After the T2 CPMG data passes qualification, in instances when the decay process has been observed long enough to allow for the application of a Jackknife test of the fit, the CPMG data is randomly split into two subsets Train and Test such that Train has no more than 8,000 data points with the remainder being assigned to the Test set. The Train data is inverted and the resulting model parameters, which define a multi-exponential decay function, are used to assess fit quality on the Test data. Fit quality on the Test data gives an independent measure of fit, and is used in the feature extraction phase of the T2 coagulation algorithm.
(227) CONTIN Parameter Values
(228) Several CONTIN parameters dramatically influence the quality of the inverse Laplace transform. Table 6 documents those parameters and the values used by the T2 coagulation algorithm to best fit the T2 CPMG data. The regularization value () plays a major role in one's ability to resolve two or more T2 peaks. The T2 coagulation algorithm requires narrow peaks to distinguish when subpopulations of water molecules begin to distinguish themselves from other populations. The specific range of values specified in Table 6 forces CONTIN to search for solutions with regularization weights that allow for this subpopulation discrimination.
(229) TABLE-US-00006 TABLE 6 CONTIN Parameters and Values for T2 coagulation algorithm Name Value Description NG Varies by Number of T2 grid points used for ILT sample GMNMX(1) 1 Minimum T2 value (msec) GMNMX(2) Varies by Maximum T2 value (msec) sample NONNEG 1 Search for non-negative solution only NQPROG(1) 0 Number of course grid alpha (regularization parameter) search attempts NQPROG(2) 12 Number of fine grid alpha (regularization parameter) search attempts RSVMNX(3) 4E0 Defines minimum alpha in Fine grid search RSVMNX(4) 1E7 Defined maximum alpha in Fine grid search RUSER(21) 1 Sets R21 in fm{circumflex over ()}2 * lambda{circumflex over ()}R23 * exp(R21 * tk * lambdam{circumflex over ()}R22) RUSER(22) 1 Sets R22 in fm{circumflex over ()}2 * lambda{circumflex over ()}R23 * exp(R21 * tk * lambdam{circumflex over ()}R22) RUSER(23) 1 Sets R23 in fm{circumflex over ()}2 * lambda{circumflex over ()}R23 * exp(R21 * tk * lambdam{circumflex over ()}R22)
(230) The minimum T2 value is typically set in the range of 1-50 ms. This accounts for CPMG time constants arising from plastics in the sample containers. When the minimum is increased above 1 ms, the CPMG curve data on which ILT is performed must be truncated to exclude those short time constants not admitted to the inversion. For example, if the minimum T2 were set at 40 ms, the CPMG data collected prior to 40 ms would be removed prior to performing the ILT.
(231) The maximum T2 value varies by sample/assay type and usage mode in the following ways. Platelet rich and poor plasma samples, which contain few RBCs, require larger maximum T2 values. PPP and PRP maximum T2 values are set in the range of 2500-3500 ms. RBC containing samples will have maximum T2 values in the range of 1000-2000 ms. The maximum T2 value may also be reduced when magnetic particles are included in the sample. For situations in which there is no predicted T2 value, the maximum T2 values can be set in the range of 2500-4000 ms to admit the broadest range of potential T2 values while examining novel sample types. Because ILT fits attempt to account for the entire CPMG curve, but do so over a finite range of T2 values, spurious peaks can occur at the T2 fit boundaries. To accommodate this, an additional 0.5-1 seconds is added to the maximum T2 value used. The ranges provided above include this additional time.
(232) The Tikhonov regularization method includes a parameter (alpha) that controls the inversion's smoothness across the T2 domain. Too small and the peaks are broad with the potential of producing compound peaks, too large and the peaks are more narrow with the potential to split single peaks into several closely placed peaks. CONTIN, as an implementation of the Tikhonov algorithm, is able to search for a regularization term that seeks a compromise between these two extremes. This is accomplished by executing CONTIN without a course alpha grid search, but with an increased fine grid search (12 iterations) within the range of alpha values of about 1.0e-10 and about 4.0e0.
(233) Construction of the T2 Decay Constant Potential Surface
(234) Once each ILT is performed, a collection of curves {l.sub.j(.sub.k): 1<.sub.k<maxT2, k=1, 2, 3, . . . , N, j=0, 1, 2, 3, . . . S replaces the original collection of CPMG curves jt. For a given CPMG curve .sub.j, the decay constant .sub.k is estimated to contribute l.sub.j(.sub.k) to the multi-exponential decomposition (see equation 13):
(235)
where l.sub.j(.sub.k) may be zero for many k. Changes in the non-zero decay constants and their contributions to the decomposition above over time correspond to changes in the sample and the T2 coagulation algorithm interprets these values and their changes to derive information about the rheological state of a sample or to derive information about a hemostatic condition of a subject. Prior to extracting these features, spurious peaks and multi-modal peaks are resolved (as described below).
(236) Spurious Peak Identification and Removal
(237) In general, for a given j, the ILT amplitude values l.sub.j(.sub.k) are clustered in the T2 domain around a small (<6) regions where the values are non-zero. Ideally, these islands of non-zero intensity are unimodal and away from the boundaries of the range of T2 values over which the inversion was performed. This is not always the case, so care has to be taken to correctly interpret the l.sub.j(.sub.k).
(238) The first filter applied to l.sub.j(.sub.k) is to remove non-zero values where the T2 value is inconsistent with prior expected values based on the type of sample being analyzed. Examples of this include T2<50 ms, which arise from the plastic containing the sample, T2<100 ms if the sample was expected to have high concentrations of protein, and T2 at or near the maximum T2 range used for inversion, whose presence indicates a larger maximum T2 should have been used to invert the sample's CPMG data.
(239) Additionally, while estimating each l.sub.j(.sub.k), the Tikhonov regularization method computes a standard error .sub.j(.sub.k) of l.sub.j(.sub.k). When l.sub.j(.sub.k) is near zero, it is common that l.sub.j(.sub.k)<.sub.j(.sub.k), which implies the edges of most non-zero islands are ambiguous despite a strong signal near the mean .sub.k of such a collection of non-zero intensities. These l.sub.j(.sub.k) are not removed. Alternatively, when l.sub.j(.sub.k)<.sub.j(.sub.k) at a .sub.k at which l.sub.j(.sub.k) is a local maximum, the entire non-zero island is regarded as unreliable and is set to zero.
EXAMPLE 16
Use of Dried or Frozen Reagents
(240) Dried or frozen reagents may be used in the methods of the invention. The results below demonstrate that drying the reagents and freezing the reagents had no discernible influence on the coagulation process observed by T2 relaxation.
(241) Tube-Dried Collagen as a Platelet Activator
(242) Collagen is a potent activator of platelets, and recognition of exposed collagen from the cellular matrix is one of the in vivo signals for platelet activation. We have demonstrated that small aliquots of collagen dried in the bottom of a microtube can effectively generate a T2MR clot peak in both whole blood and RBC-depleted plasma. To prepare the tube, 2 micrograms (2 L of a 1 mg/ml solution) was deposited in the bottom of a microtube and the tube placed at 37 C. for 2-5 hours. A tube prepared in this way can be kept at room temperature or at 37 C. for several weeks. To measure a T2MR signature 34 L of citrated whole blood (or RBC-depleted blood) were added to the tube at 37 degrees; after 1 minute 2 L of 0.2M CaCl.sub.2 was added and the sample placed in the magnet for relaxation measurements and analysis.
(243) Frozen One-Pot Formulations for ADP Activation of Platelets
(244) We have developed a standard formulation for ADP activation of platelets in citrated whole blood which uses the addition of heparin to control thrombin activation, thereby minimizing variability in platelet activation via thrombin. Clotting in such a system is initiated with a combination of calcium (to overcome citrate), and reptilase/factor XIIIa (to replace thrombin). The complete one-pot activation mixture which activates platelets via ADP, and is therefore useful in probing the state of the P2Y12 ADP receptor, contains heparin, reptilase, factor XIIIa, calcium, and ADP.
(245) We have demonstrated that such a mixture can be made in small batches and frozen (at 20 C.) in single-use aliquots for T2MR measurement of ADP-induced platelet activity measurements. The use of this mixture consists of thawing a pre-made microtube containing an appropriate amount of reagent mix at room temperature, adding 34 L citrated whole blood, mixing, and placing the sample in the reader for relaxation measurements analysis.
(246) Dried Kaolin Assay
(247) Kaolin runs permit resolution of the serum and clot signals. Across patient samples, these runs can show variation of the absolute T2 values from user errors. Use of dried reagents avoids pipetting errors and reduces reagent addition variation normally encountered during all wet reagent experiments. Additionally, use of dried reagents provides a much simpler assay protocol where blood is added directly to a tube containing dried reagents with no additional pipetting steps.
(248) A dry mix was prepared containing CaCl.sub.2 and Kaolin. 24 L of 0.2M CaCl.sub.2 and 10.8 L of Kaolin (Haemonetics) were mixed and aliquots distributed into 10 PCR tubes (2.9 L of prepared mix into each tube). The contents of each tube were dried in an incubator at 37 C. over 2 hours with the tube caps open. Each tub was capped and stored tubes at 2-25 C. To the preheated PCR tube with dried CK reagent mix was added 36 L of preheated citrated whole blood. The reagents and blood were gently mixed 3 times by pipetting up and down with 100 L pipette tip. The mixture was capped, and the sample placed into a T2 reader for relaxation measurements analysis. Wet reagents were also combined with citrated whole blood as a control.
EXAMPLE 17
Effect of Aspirin
(249) In this experiment platelet inhibition was monitored by the addition of 600 M aspirin ex vivo to heparin blood prior to activation by AA+RF (samples were tested with and without aspirin). It was observed that clot-associated T2 signal is dramatically diminished or absent in the presence of samples doped with aspirin. These studies confirmed that the clot signature was dependent on platelet activity. They also demonstrate the utility of T2MR signatures for measuring platelet inhibition.
EXAMPLE 18
Effect of 2-thiomethyl AMP (MeSAMP)
(250) In this experiment inhibition of the P2Y12 pathway in platelets by using the ex vivo spiked MeSAMP (2-thiomethyl AMP, an irreversible ADP P2Y12 receptor inhibitor) as a mimic for Plavix inhibition of platelet activity was tested.
(251) A standard ADP activation formulation including heparin, reptilase, factor XIIIa, calcium, and ADP was used to activate platelet in citrated whole blood obtained from healthy donors. Samples were tested in the presence and absence of the platelet activation inhibitor MeSAMP. Again we observed that the clot signature was dependent on platelet activity. It was observed that clot-associated T2 signal is dramatically diminished or absent in the presence of samples doped with MeSAMP.
EXAMPLE 19
Effect of Tissue Plasminogen Activator
(252) The T2MR surface is also sensitive to whole blood fibrinolysis. To assess this, healthy donor samples were spiked with tissue plasminogen activator (TPA). High sensitivity and rapid time to result for fibrinolysis was demonstrated.
(253) TPA was added at 100 U/mL to blood from a healthy donor. In the absence of TPA (see
(254) The T2MR effect on fibrinolysis was expressed in AU values (arbitrary units; see
(255) Fibrinolysis was monitored by T2 magnetic resonance (T2MR) in five patient blood samples with and without the addition of TPA (100 U/mL) (
Other Embodiments
(256) All publications, patents, and patent applications mentioned in this specification are herein incorporated by reference to the same extent as if each independent publication or patent application was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference.
(257) While the invention has been described in connection with specific embodiments thereof, it will be understood that it is capable of further modifications and this application is intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the invention following, in general, the principles of the invention and including such departures from the present disclosure that come within known or customary practice within the art to which the invention pertains and may be applied to the essential features hereinbefore set forth, and follows in the scope of the claims.
(258) Other embodiments are within the claims.