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Simon Senanu: A Stepwise Laboratory Approach for aPTT Prolongation
Apr 1, 2026, 15:31

Simon Senanu: A Stepwise Laboratory Approach for aPTT Prolongation

Simon Senanu, Medical Laboratory Scientist at Perkins Medical Centre, shared a post on LinkedIn:

“aPTT Prolongation – A Stepwise Laboratory Approach

A prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) is a common laboratory finding.

But not all prolongations indicate a bleeding disorder.

The key lies in a structured interpretation.

What Does aPTT Assess?

aPTT evaluates the intrinsic and common pathways:

  • Factor XII, XI, IX, VIII
  • Factor X, V, II (prothrombin), fibrinogen

Any defect, inhibitor, or interference in these pathways can prolong aPTT.

Step 1: Confirm the Result

Before interpretation, rule out pre-analytical errors:

  • Underfilled citrate tube (incorrect blood-to-anticoagulant ratio)
  • Clotted sample
  • Heparin contamination (e.g., line draws)

Always repeat if the result is unexpected.

Step 2: Perform a Mixing Study

Mix patient plasma with normal plasma (1:1):

  • Correction of aPTT – Suggests factor deficiency
  • No correction – Suggests circulating inhibitor

This is the most critical step in narrowing the cause.

If It Corrects – Think Factor Deficiency

Common etiologies:

  • Hemophilia A (Factor VIII deficiency)
  • Hemophilia B (Factor IX deficiency)
  • Factor XI deficiency
  • Severe von Willebrand disease (via reduced Factor VIII)

Factor XII deficiency can prolong aPTT but does not cause bleeding – a key diagnostic trap.

If It Does Not Correct – Think Inhibitor or Anticoagulant

Key causes:

  • Lupus anticoagulant (LA)
  • Specific factor inhibitors (e.g., acquired Factor VIII inhibitor)
  • Heparin or direct anticoagulants

Lupus anticoagulant prolongs phospholipid – dependent assays but is associated with thrombosis.

Pattern Recognition in Practice

  • Isolated prolonged aPTT plus bleeding – Hemophilia or severe vWD
  • Isolated prolonged aPTT plus thrombosis – Lupus anticoagulant
  • Prolonged aPTT plus normal PT plus no symptoms – Likely benign cause or artifact
  • Prolonged aPTT plus clinical deterioration – Consider acquired inhibitor

Laboratory Pitfalls

  • Heparin contamination mimicking inhibitor patterns
  • Acute phase reactions altering factor levels
  • Delayed testing affecting labile factors (especially Factor VIII)

Always integrate clinical plus laboratory data.

Clinical Significance

A prolonged aPTT can indicate:

  • Inherited bleeding disorders
  • Acquired inhibitors
  • Antiphospholipid syndrome
  • Anticoagulant therapy effects

Misinterpretation can lead to inappropriate management.

Laboratory Takeaway

aPTT prolongation is not a diagnosis – it is a starting point.

Think systematically:

Error – Mixing study – Deficiency vs inhibitor – Clinical correlation

When you see a prolonged aPTT, what’s your immediate instinct – repeat the test or proceed directly to a mixing study?”

Simon Senanu

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