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Immune thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (iTTP) is a rare, life-threatening disorder characterized by microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, severe thrombocytopenia, and ischemic organ damage due to microvascular thrombosis. It results from a severe deficiency in the von Willeband factor (vWF)-cleaving protease ADAMTS13, primarily caused by autoantibodies that inhibit its activity. This deficiency leads to accumulation of ultra-large vWF multimers, triggering pathological platelet aggregation and widespread microthrombi. iTTP typically presents with acute neurological symptoms (e.g., confusion, seizures, coma), cardiac events (e.g., myocardial infarction), and multiorgan dysfunction. Without prompt treatment-plasma exchange, immunosuppression, and the vWF inhibitor caplacizumab-mortality exceeds 90%. Survivors face long-term risks, including cardiovascular complications, cognitive impairment, and reduced life expectancy.
The TWI-LIGHT protocol is a national retrospective epidemiological study coordinated by the French Reference Center for Thrombotic Microangiopathies (CNR-MAT). It aims to analyze long-term outcome in >1,200 iTTP patients diagnosed between October 2000 and June 2024. The study leverages pseudonymized data from the CNR-MAT registry, collected via a secure REDCap database.
Key Objectives:
Primary: Assess the impact of cardiovascular risk factors (e.g., hypertension, diabetes) and ADAMTS13 activity on life expectancy in iTTP survivors.
Secondary:
Methodology:
Expected Outcomes:
Ethical Framework:
This landmark study will inform clinical guidelines, optimize survivor care, and address unmet needs in iTTP management through comprehensive, real-world data analysis.
Full description
The TWI-LIGHT protocol is a retrospective, non-interventional epidemiological study coordinated by the French National Reference Center for Thrombotic Microangiopathies (CNR-MAT). It leverages the CNR-MAT registry to analyze long-term outcomes in over 1,200 patients diagnosed with autoimmune thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (iTTP) between October 1, 2000, and June 1, 2024.
Background and Rationale iTTP is a rare, life-threatening disorder caused by severe ADAMTS13 deficiency, leading to microvascular thrombosis, multiorgan damage, and high mortality without prompt treatment. Survivors face long-term risks, including cardiovascular complications, cognitive impairment, and reduced life expectancy. Despite therapeutic advances (e.g., caplacizumab, rituximab), data on late complications, risk factors, and disease burden in underrepresented subgroups (e.g., pregnant women, children, elderly patients) remain limited. This study addresses critical gaps in understanding iTTP's natural history, treatment efficacy, and survival.
Study Design
Type: Retrospective, multicenter, non-interventional (MR-004 compliance).
Data Collected:
Biobanking: ADAMTS13 samples stored at Hôpital Lariboisière (Prof. Veyradier's lab) under ethical approval (AC-2023-6021).
Expected Outcomes and Impact
Clinical Insights:
Health System Impact:
Methodological Rigor: Centralized data auditing, ISO/IEC 17025-compliant biobanking.
Enrollment
Sex
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
-Patients with a diagnosis of immune mediated TTP
Exclusion criteria
1,200 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Paul COPPO, MD, PHD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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