An assessment of monocyte procoagulant activity in patients with solid tumors.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Generation of thromboplastin by monocytes has been shown to play a vital role in hypercoagulable states seen in malignancy. The purpose of this study was to compare the procoagulant activity in cancer patients and controls. Recalcification times (RT) of whole blood from 19 normal volunteers, 8 patients with benign polyps, 12 patients previously treated by surgery for head and neck (H&N) or colon cancer, and 13 untreated patients with various stages of H&N or colon cancer were determined. Tests were performed with and without stimulation with Escherichia coli endotoxin. The mean RT in saline (RTS) of untreated patients with early cancer (4.58 +/- 0.83 min) and that of patients with advanced cancer (5.23 +/- 1.16 min) were lower than that of controls (6.55 +/- 0.82 min), P less than 0.01 and P less than 0.05, respectively. The RTS of patients previously treated and of those with benign polyps were no different from those of controls. Activation with endotoxin significantly lowered the recalcification times (RTE) in the early (3.90 +/- 0.58 min) and advanced cancer patients (4.23 +/- 0.66 min) compared to the RTE of controls (5.69 +/- 0.75 min, P less than 0.01 for both groups) as well as compared to those with benign tumors, P less than 0.05. The mean RTE of previously treated patients (4.72 +/- 0.58 min) was also lower than that of controls, P less than 0.05. Our results suggest that RT is significantly reduced in cancer patients compared to that of controls. Furthermore, monocyte activation with endotoxin may enable us to distinguish cancer patients from controls as well as from those with benign tumors.