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Blood, 15 March 2006, Vol. 107, No. 6, pp. 2346-2353. Prepublished online as a Blood First Edition Paper on November 22, 2005; DOI 10.1182/blood-2005-08-3122.
HEMOSTASIS, THROMBOSIS, AND VASCULAR BIOLOGY Role of platelet surface PF4 antigenic complexes in heparin-induced thrombocytopenia pathogenesis: diagnostic and therapeutic implicationsFrom the Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA; National Institute for Rheumatic Diseases, Piestany, Slovakia; Division of Hematology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC; and Departments of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine and Pediatrics, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA.
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) antibodies recognize complexes between heparin and platelet factor 4 (PF4). Heparin and PF4 bind HIT antibodies only over a narrow molar ratio. We explored the involvement of platelet surfacebound PF4 as an antigen in the pathogenesis of experimental HIT. We show that cell-surface PF4 complexes are also antigenic only over a restricted concentration range of PF4. Heparin is not required for HIT antibody binding but shifts the concentration of PF4 needed for optimal surface antigenicity to higher levels. These data are supported by in vitro studies involving both human and murine platelets with exogenous recombinant human (h) PF4 and either an antiPF4-heparin monoclonal antibody (KKO) or HIT immunoglobulin. Injection of KKO into transgenic mice expressing different levels of hPF4 demonstrates a correlation between the severity of the thrombocytopenia and platelet hPF4 expression. Therapeutic interventions in this model using high-dose heparin or protamine sulfate support the pathogenic role of surface PF4 antigenic complexes in the etiology of HIT. We believe that this focus on surface PF4 advances our understanding of the pathogenesis of HIT, suggests ways to identify patients at high risk to develop HIT upon heparin exposure, and offers new therapeutic strategies.
Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT) is an iatrogenic complication of heparin therapy caused by antibodies that recognize complexes formed between heparin and the endogenous protein platelet factor 4 (PF4).1-3 Approximately half of affected patients develop limb- or life-threatening thrombosis.4-6 Management involves careful monitoring of platelet counts, a high index of clinical suspicion, cessation of heparin exposure, and the introduction of alternative anticoagulants.7,8 These measures have reduced the incidence of new thromboembolic complications but have had less impact on the incidence of amputations and death.9,10 Heparin remains an important anticoagulant in widespread use, and studies that help define the pathophysiology of HIT may lead to better identification of patients at risk and to more targeted intervention strategies.
The antibody response in HIT is unusual in several respects. First, the major complications of HIT are related to thrombosis in contrast to other drug-induced thrombocytopenias.11 This high incidence of thrombosis may be related in part to the ability of HIT antibodies to activate platelets via Fc It is not known whether similar complexes between PF4 and cell-surface glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) form on the surface of platelets or how heparin affects surface complex formation and antigenicity. Based on the knowledge that PF4 can bind to diverse anionic polysaccharides,24 PF4 may form similar antigenic complexes on platelets by binding to GAGs on the surface of platelets independent of heparin. The composition of these antigenic complexes and their capacity to be modulated has not been studied. We examined the effect of the anti-PF4/heparin mAb KKO (and in some studies, HIT IgG) on platelets expressing varied amounts of endogenous or exogenous PF4 on their surface both in vitro and in vivo. The results of these studies provide insight into the importance of the level of surface PF4 expression, the effect of heparin on formation of surface antigenic complexes, and potential new diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to HIT based on these new insights.
Preparation of recombinant WT hPF4 Wild-type (WT) hPF4 in pT7-7 plasmid was expressed in BL21DE30 pLysS bacteria, purified, and characterized as described.25 Recombinant protein was isolated from bacterial lysate supernatant by affinity chromatography using a HiTrap Heparin HP column (Amersham Bioscience, Upsala, Sweden). Proteins were purified further by fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC) using a RESOURCE RPC column (Amersham Bioscience). Protein purity was assessed by 15% (wt/vol) sodium dodecyl sulfatepolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) followed by silver staining.26 Samples were subjected to immunoblotting after electrotransfer to polyvinylidenedifluoride (PVDF) membranes using rabbit anti-hPF4 polyclonal antibody (PeproTech, Rocky Hill, NJ), followed by donkey antirabbit secondary antibody conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (HRP; Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, West Grove, PA) and were developed using the enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL) kit (PerkinElmer Life Sciences, Boston, MA). Total protein concentrations were determined using the bicinchoninic acid assay (Pierce, Rockford, IL) as per manufacturer with BSA as standard. Monoclonal antibodies and HIT immunoglobulins KKO, the anti-hPF4specific mAb RTO, and isoimmune control TRA are all mouse IgG2b mAbs.27 Antibodies were fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) labeled using an E-Z FITC labeling kit (Pierce) as per the manufacturer. Monoclonal antihuman CD41a PerCP-Cy5 and antimouse CD41 phycoerythrin (PE) antibodies and annexin VPE were from Pharmingen (San Diego, CA). Polyclonal IgG was isolated from the plasma of 4 patients with clinical HIT7,8,11,28 and a positive HIT enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)3 and from 4 healthy subjects with recombinant protein Gagarose (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA), as per the manufacturer. A commercial human IgG preparation (Pierce) was used as an additional control. HIT IgG reactivity with PF4-heparin complexes was confirmed by ELISA.3 Platelet preparation and analyses Studies were performed using human platelets or platelets from WT and transgenic mice (see below for the description of the mice). Human blood was collected in acid citrate dextrose (ACD; pH 4.5, 10:1 vol/vol) after informed consent from healthy, aspirin-free volunteers under a protocol approved by the Institutional Review Board for Studies involving Human Subjects of the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. All studies involving mice were approved by the same institution's Institute Animal Care and Use Committee. Blood was centrifuged at 200g for 15 minutes at room temperature (RT) to generate platelet-rich plasma (PRP). PGE1 (final concentration 1 µg/mL; Sigma, St Louis, MO) was added to the PRP to prevent spontaneous platelet activation. PRP was centrifuged at 800g for 10 minutes at RT, and the pellet was washed and resuspended in modified Tyrode buffer (134 mM NaCl, 3 mM KCl, 0.3 mM NaH2PO4, 2 mM MgCl2, 5 mM HEPES, 5 mM glucose, 12 mM NaHCO3, 0.1% BSA; Sigma A7030, fatty acidfree). Mouse PRP and washed platelets were prepared using blood collected from the inferior vena cava in ACD (1:5 vol/vol), immediately diluted 1:3 (vol/vol) in modified Tyrode buffer containing PGE1 (final concentration, 1 µg/mL), and centrifuged at 200g for 4 minutes at RT. PRP was centrifuged at 800g for 10 minutes at RT, and the pellet was washed and resuspended in modified Tyrode buffer. Both human and murine washed platelets were used at 108/mL. Washed platelets were incubated with varying amounts (0-80 µg) of recombinant hPF4 in a final volume of 100 µL for 45 minutes at RT. In some experiments, increasing amounts of unfractionated heparin (0-40 µg, porcine intestinal mucosa; Sigma) were added to the platelets before the PF4. KKO or another antibody (50 µg) under study was then added to each sample for an additional 15 minutes. Samples were then diluted with Tyrode buffer and enumerated immediately or fixed in 1% paraformaldehyde in PBS (1:10 vol/vol). Total immunodetectable platelet hPF4 was determined using murine platelets completely deficient in murine PF4 (mPF4null).29 PF4 was cross-linked on the platelet surface by adding 1% paraformaldehyde (1:10 vol/vol) overnight at 4°C. Samples were washed with PBS, and platelets were lysed in NuPage LDS Sample Buffer (Invitrogen). Fractions were separated on a 10% SDS-PAGE gel and immunoblotted after electrotransfer to a PVDF membrane with a rabbit antihuman PF4 (1:5000) primary antibody (PeproTech) followed by an HRP-conjugated donkey antirabbit antibody (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories) and developed using an ECL kit. Autoradiographic bands over the linear range of exposure were analyzed on a UMAX Vista-58 scanner (Hsinchu, Taiwan), and the data were analyzed by developing a histogram of the calculated density using the National Institutes of Health (NIH) program ImageJ (http://rsb.info.nih.gov). Total surface PF4 binding was also detected using mPF4null platelets after paraformaldehyde cross-linking, as described above. Samples were then washed 3 times with Tyrode buffer and incubated with polyclonal rabbit anti-hPF4 antibody and followed by FITC-conjugated goat antirabbit IgG. Binding of KKO was performed by indirect immunofluorescence as a control. Samples were incubated with unlabeled KKO after a 1-hour incubation with PF4, then fixed with 1% paraformaldehyde overnight at 4°C, washed 3 times with Tyrode buffer, and stained with FITC-conjugated goat antimouse IgG. Washed mPF4null platelets were incubated with various concentrations (0-5 U/mL) of chondroitinase ABC (Sigma) and/or heparinase I (Sigma) at 37°C. After 30 minutes, aliquots containing equal numbers of platelets were incubated with Tyrode buffer containing various concentrations of PF4 (0-400 µg/mL, final concentration) for 60 minutes at RT. FITC-labeled KKO (50 µg/mL) was added for 15 minutes, the sample was diluted 1:10 with Tyrode buffer, and antibody binding was measured by flow cytometry. Platelet flow cytometry Binding of FITC-labeled KKO to the platelet was identified using a Becton Dickinson FACSscan calibrated for fluorescence and light scatter using the manufacturer's standard beads (CaliBRITE; Becton Dickinson, San Jose, CA). Data for forward-angle scatter (FSC), side-angle scatter (SSC), and fluorescence were obtained with gain settings in logarithmic mode. Human platelets were identified and gated according to the SSC and immunofluorescence with anti-CD41a mAb. Platelet activation was estimated by annexin V binding.23 To measure the binding of annexin V, the incubated platelets were diluted 1:10 in binding buffer (0.01 M HEPES, 0.14 M NaCl, and 2.5 mM CaCl2) containing annexin VPE. When annexin VPE and KKO-FITC binding were measured simultaneously, platelets were size-selected based on FSC and SSC. Characterization of transgenic mice
Transgenic mice expressing different amounts of hPF4 mRNA per platelet have been described previously.26 Three lines bearing 1, 6, and 22 copy numbers of the human PF4 gene/haplotype were used. Previous analysis of multiple tissues using immunohistochemistry and reverse transcriptasePCR (polymerase chain reaction) showed that hPF4 was expressed exclusively in megakaryocytes. Transgenic mice expressing Fc Total platelet hPF4 levels in the various transgenic hPF4 lines were determined using an Asserachrom PF4 kit (Diagnostica Stago, Parsippany, NJ), as per the manufacturer, using recombinant hPF4 as the standard. Mouse blood was obtained by retro-orbital puncture. The plate was read at 450 nm in a THERMOmax microplate reader (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA). Measurements of surface KKO binding in vivo in WT and the hPF4 transgenic mice were determined after intravenous injection of 20 µg FITC-labeled KKO in 200 µL sterile PBS via the tail vein followed by withdrawal of 50 µL blood from the retro-orbital plexus 10 minutes later. The blood was coimmunostained for CD41, and KKO binding to CD41+ cells was estimated by flow cytometry. In other studies, KKO was injected intraperitoneally in a final volume of 200 µL diluted with sterile PBS. Porcine heparin (200 µL 100 U/mL stock; Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, IL) was injected subcutaneously in a subgroup of studied animals beginning at 24 hours for 4 consecutive days. Complete blood counts were measured in 50 µL whole blood obtained by retro-orbital puncture into Safe-T-Fill minicapillary blood collection tubes (Kabe Labortechnik, Nümbrecht-Elsenroth). Platelets were enumerated using an automatic cell counter (HEMAVET; Drew Scientific, Oxford, CT). In the therapeutic intervention studies, either porcine heparin (100 U/kg) or protamine sulfate (2 mg/kg) was injected intravenously over 2 minutes. KKO (200 µg) was given intraperitoneally 1 hour later (zero time point). Injection of heparin or protamine was repeated 21 and 45 hours later. Blood counts were determined as described for the other murine studies. Statistics Platelet counts between groups were compared using the Student t test. Statistical analyses were performed using Graph Pad Prism (GraphPad Software, San Diego, CA). Differences were considered significant at a P value of less than .05.
PF4 bound to the platelet surface forms antigenic complexes on human platelets To better understand the pathogenesis of HIT, we asked whether antigenic complexes form between PF4 and GAGs on the platelet surface. KKO bound poorly to unstimulated, washed human platelets (Figure 1A). However, addition of recombinant hPF4 markedly increased binding of KKO in a dose-dependent manner. Binding followed a bell-shaped curve (Figure 1A). Maximal binding of KKO, corresponding to an approximately 100-fold increase in fluorescence intensity, occurred at an hPF4 concentration of 50 µg/mL. This peak was not limited by the amount of KKO added (data not shown). Binding of an isotype control mAb (TRA) and anti-CD41 mAb increased less than 7% compared with KKO over the same range of PF4 concentrations (Figure 1A).
We next examined the effect of heparin on the binding of KKO to surface-bound PF4. Platelet GAGs are composed predominantly of chondroitin and, to a lesser extent, heparan sulfates,31 each of which has a lower affinity for PF4 than highmolecular weight (HMW) heparin.32 At levels of added PF4 where binding of KKO to platelets is suboptimal (left side of the curve in Figure 1A), binding was reduced further or eliminated by addition of heparin. Figure 1B shows this result at a low level of surface hPF4 (12.5 µg/mL added; Figure 1B, diamonds) and for the peak level of surface hPF4 (50 µg/mL added; Figure 1B, squares). However, in the presence of hPF4 concentrations that exceeded peak antigen formation on platelets, addition of heparin enhanced KKO binding. Figure 1B shows this for 200 µg/mL hPF4 (Figure 1B, circles). These studies suggest that in settings associated with high levels of surface-bound PF4, heparin enhances cell surface antigenicity.
Binding of KKO to PF4-coated platelets induced their activation as measured by an increase in surface binding of annexin V (Figure 1C). We then asked whether activation releases additional PF4 from internal stores, which in turns alters the composition of PF4-GAG complexes and KKO binding. To examine this possibility, we incubated human platelets with 50 µg/mL of hPF4 and followed KKO binding over time. KKO binding increased with time, reaching a plateau at 20 to 60 minutes and then decreased (Figure 1D). These dynamic changes suggest that the composition of the surface PF4-GAG complexes had been modified over time, possibly due to release of PF4 from newly recruited Fc PF4 bound to the platelet surface forms antigenic complexes on murine platelets
Studies of human platelets are thus confounded by the release of internal stores of hPF4 and the presence of Fc
We then examined whether KKO recognized PF4 bound to surface GAGs by pretreating the cells with either chondroitinase (CS) ABC or heparinase I or both together. CS ABC alone (Figure 2B) or with heparinase I (data not shown), but not heparinase I alone (data not shown), decreased KKO binding. These data are consistent with platelet membrane GAGs being composed predominantly of chondroitin sulfates.31,32 When GAGs were stripped from the platelet surface, the concentration of PF4 needed for maximal KKO binding was unaltered. This may indicate that clusters of chondroitin remain intact, whereas other areas of the platelet become devoid of GAGs.
We then asked whether Fc
Platelet activation by KKO clearly occurs via Fc Studies with HIT IgG KKO competes with many HIT antibodies for binding to platelets, suggesting a common epitope on PF4-heparin, and activates platelets through similar mechanisms.27 Nevertheless, we extended our studies to determine whether HIT antibodies behaved in a similar manner with respect to platelet surface PF4 levels. Studies based on those shown in Figure 1A were repeated using either IgG isolated from patients with HIT diagnosed by clinical criteria7,8,11,28 and a positive HIT ELISA,3 IgG from healthy volunteers, or a commercial pooled IgG preparation. Three of the 4 HIT IgG samples tested caused strong activation of platelets as measured by binding of annexin V (Figure 3A) in contrast to the 4 healthy controls or a commercial IgG preparation (Figure 3B). Maximal platelet activation occurred at the same concentration of PF4 (50 µg/mL) as was seen with KKO. In vivo studies in mice expressing different amounts of hPF4 The in vitro data indicate that there is an amount of cell-surface PF4 at which HIT-antibody binding is maximal. This bell-shaped relationship between PF4 concentration and binding of HIT antibody extends previous studies in which a similar relationship was seen when the concentrations of PF4 and heparin in solution were varied.22 However, GAGs appear to fulfill the role of heparin on the platelet surface. If these findings have clinical relevance, then in a murine model of HIT, (1) the severity of thrombocytopenia should parallel endogenous hPF4 expression; (2) if sufficient PF4 has already been released and bound to the cell surface, exogenous heparin would not be required to cause thrombocytopenia once antibody is present; and (3) heparin would exacerbate thrombocytopenia in the setting of high PF4 content.
We previously described the creation of transgenic mouse lines expressing various levels of hPF4 RNA.26 We now measured total platelet hPF4 compared with the average hPF4 content of 4 human platelet controls. hPF4 levels varied from approximately 0.5 times the content of human platelets in hPF4low mice (which have one copy of the hPF4 transgene/haploid genome) to approximately 2 times the level in hPF4mid mice (which have 6 copies/haploid genome) to approximately 6 times in hPF4high mice (which have 22 copies/haploid genome; Figure 4A). Flow cytometric studies of platelets from these transgenic lines demonstrate that all have detectable surface-bound hPF4 in vivo measured 10 minutes after intravenous injection of KKO, with antibody binding proportional to platelet PF4 expression (Figure 4B).
By 3 hours after an intraperitoneal injection of KKO, hPF4high/Fc
Therapeutic intervention in the murine model The above studies suggest that interventions that skew the GAG/PF4 ratio toward either extreme may protect against formation of HIT antigenic complexes on the platelet surface. We employed 2 such strategies to test this hypothesis. (1) Based on the data in Figure 1B, we inferred that a marked excess of heparin would reduce surface antigenicity and prevent HIT even in the presence of a pathogenic anti-PF4/heparin antibody. (2) The data suggest a similar outcome would be expected from an excess of a cationic moiety that binds to platelets and prevents incorporation of PF4 into the antigenic complexes. Protamine sulfate is a small positively charged molecule that competes with PF4 for binding to GAGs33 and has been used clinically to neutralize heparin.34 Although cardiovascular side effects have been reported rarely,35,36 protamine sulfate has the advantage over infusing large amounts of hPF4 by not chancing a transient increase in surface antigenicity.
Transgenic hPF4mid/Fc
Surface-bound PF4 is antigenic for HIT antibodies and KKO over a narrow range of PF4 concentrations, leading to platelet activation through Fc RIIA. Our data suggest that PF4 forms antigenic complexes with endogenous GAGs on the surface of platelets similar to ULCs that form between HMW heparin and PF4 in solution.23 These data could explain why only a subgroup of heparinized patients with HIT antibodies develop HIT. Platelets vary widely in PF4 content (unpublished data) and perhaps in released PF4 and surface PF4 levels. Those individuals with the highest levels of surface PF4 prior to heparinization may be most susceptible to continue to express surface HIT antigenic complexes after heparinization and develop HIT. In addition, the proposed model may also help explain why HIT can develop after heparin therapy has been stopped37 and why HIT can occur in a delayed fashion long after infused heparin has been cleared.38
PF4 is a member of the CXC subfamily of chemokines that possesses high affinity for heparin and other large, anionic molecules.39 PF4 is expressed in megakaryocytes and stored in platelet
The concentration of PF4 that optimized KKO platelet binding (50 µg/mL) is the same as proved optimal for activation by HIT IgG (Figures 1A and 3A, respectively) and is well within what is attained in the immediate environ of activated platelets after platelet
To study the in vivo relevance of our observation, we used the previously described murine HIT model.14 We, as others, had assumed that heparin would be a necessary component for thrombocytopenia to develop in this model. Contrary to expectation, heparin is not required to induce thrombocytopenia. The pathogenic relevance of surface PF4 expression was supported by in vivo studies in transgenic mice expressing varying amounts of PF4 in which the severity of KKO-induced thrombocytopenia was proportionate to total platelet (and surface) hPF4 content (Figure 5C). The reason for the presence of hPF4 on the surface of these platelets is unclear. Unlike patients with HIT, mice have little vascular disease that would sustain platelet activation leading to PF4 release and surface-bound PF4. Transgenic expression of hPF4 in the presence of the full complement of murine PF4 may have exceeded the storage content of serglycins47 inside the
Based on our findings, we reasoned that we could interfere with the development of thrombocytopenia in the double-transgenic mice by altering the surface PF4-GAG ratio on the platelets. In support of this concept, infusing either high doses of heparin or protamine sulfate prevented KKO-induced thrombocytopenia in hPF4mid/Fc
In Figure 7, we propose a model for the onset of HIT based on our findings and on published literature. Patients who develop HIT are typically older and likely to have underlying cardiovascular disease and/or have undergone surgical manipulation. We propose that platelet activation in these patients leads to PF4 release and rebinding. In the vast majority of individuals and clinical settings, endogenous PF4 is low and surface PF4 expression does not exceed the equivalent of adding 50 µg/mL PF4 (Figure 7, top). Therapeutic heparinization markedly reduces platelet surface PF4. Heparinization would induce HIT antibody formation in up to half of these patients but there would be little surface HIT antigen available and little risk of developing HIT. On the other hand, in the small number of individuals with high platelet PF4 content and sufficient platelet activation leading to high surface PF4 levels, therapeutic heparinization would not eliminate surface antigenicity (Figure 7, bottom). These patients are at least as likely as other patients to develop HIT antibodies after heparinization. However in these individuals, the antibodies can activate a large number of platelets because of the high level of remaining platelet surface antigen, leading to more PF4 release and repetitive cycles of platelet activation. These patients are at high risk of developing HIT. The model we propose offers the testable hypothesis that patients with high total and/or surface PF4 are at significant risk of developing HIT and that they can be identified prospectively and offered alternative management. Identifying such high-risk patients will require additional studies to measure HIT antigen using an antibody like KKO and studying its binding in the presence of heparin (Figure 1B) or subsequent to platelet activation (Figure 1C). Our studies and model focus on the events on the platelet surface but there is little reason to suppose that similar events are not concurrently happening on the surface of the endothelial lining, circulating monocytes, and other vascular cells. The binding of HIT antibodies to the PF4 antigenic complexes on these cells would contribute not only to the developing thrombocytopenia but also to the inflammatory state and to the thrombosis by expressing tissue factor and releasing procoagulant microparticles accelerating thrombin formation, which are recognized components of HIT.43,51,52 Finally, we believe that surface PF4 may have a biologic role as well. We have previously shown that platelet PF4 content affects thrombogenicity in a bell-shaped curve fashion.29 We propose that both thrombogenicity and HIT antigenicity are greatest when formation of stable PF4-GAG ULCs on cell surfaces is maximal. How such complexes contribute to thrombosis needs further study, but, if true, patients whose platelets retain surface antigenic ULCs after heparinization are not only targets for HIT antibodies but also intrinsically prothrombotic.
In summary, the formation of HIT antigen on platelets occurs at specific concentrations of reactants. This can be demonstrated for binding of the mAb KKO to platelets and for Fc
We thank Drs Steven McKenzie and Michael Reilly (Cardeza Research Institute, Thomas Jefferson University School of Medicine) for having generously shared the Fc RIIA mouse with our group.
Submitted August 3, 2005; accepted November 14, 2005.
Prepublished online as Blood First Edition Paper, November 22, 2005; DOI 10.1182blood-2005-08-3122.
Supported by National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants HL54500 (M.P., D.B.C.), HL054749 (M.P.), HL68631 (M.P.), and HL69471 (D.B.C.); American Heart Association (AHA) grants (L.R., postdoctoral grant; G.M.A., Beginning Grant-in-Aid); and a grant from the Gustavus and Louise Pfeiffer Research Foundation (G.M.A.).
An Inside Blood analysis of this article appears at the front of this issue.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section 1734.
Reprints: Mortimer Poncz, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, 3615 Civic Center Blvd, ARC, Rm 317, Philadelphia, PA 19104; e-mail: poncz{at}email.chop.edu.
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