ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: The von Willebrand factor-cleaving protease (VWF-cp) activity has been reported to be deficient in adults with thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) and generally normal in adults with hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS). The goal of this study was to determine VWF-cp activity in children with typical postdiarrheal (d+) HUS or atypical non-postdiarrheal (d-) HUS. Study design We measured VWF-cp activity in the plasma of 64 children with either (d+) HUS (n = 41) or (d-) HUS (n = 23). RESULTS: In the acute phase of HUS, VWF-cp activity was normal (>50%) in 54 children and undetectable (<5%) in one (d+) HUS and in 6 (d-) HUS children. After a 3-month remission, the (d+) HUS patient recovered a 100% VWF-cp activity, and the 6 (d-) HUS patients kept an undetectable level. In these 6 (d-) HUS patients, the disease was characterized by a neonatal onset and several relapses (hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, transient acute renal failure, cerebral ischemia), and sometimes the development of arterial hypertension or end stage renal failure. CONCLUSION: A subgroup of pediatric patients with atypical (d-) HUS, with hematologic symptoms starting at birth and a recurrent course progressively involving kidney and brain, is related to VWF-cp deficiency and actually corresponds to Upshaw-Schulman syndrome revisited as congenital TTP.