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Prothrombin Time (PT)

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Key Coagulation Test for Extrinsic & Common Pathway - Critical for Liver Disease, Vitamin K Status & Warfarin Monitoring)

Synonyms

  • Prothrombin Time
  • PT
  • ProTime
  • Quick time
  • Extrinsic pathway clotting time
  • Coagulation factor II / VII / X test

Units of Measurement

  • seconds (s)
  • sec

No other units are used for the raw PT value.

Description

Prothrombin Time (PT) is a clot-based test that measures the time it takes for plasma to clot after the addition of:

  • Tissue factor (thromboplastin)
  • Calcium

PT evaluates the extrinsic and common coagulation pathways:

Extrinsic Pathway

  • Factor VII

Common Pathway

  • Factors II (prothrombin), V, X, and fibrinogen

PT is highly sensitive to deficiencies in:

  • Vitamin K–dependent factors (II, VII, X)
  • Liver dysfunction
  • Warfarin (coumadin) therapy
  • Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC)

Because thromboplastin reagents differ between labs, PT is standardized using INR (International Normalized Ratio) for warfarin management.

Physiological Role

PT reflects the functional ability of the coagulation cascade to form a fibrin clot via tissue-factor–mediated pathway activation.

Clinical Significance

HIGH PT (Prolonged PT)

Primary abnormality; indicates delayed clot formation.

Major Causes

1. Vitamin K Deficiency

  • Malnutrition
  • Prolonged antibiotics
  • Fat malabsorption
  • Obstructive jaundice

2. Warfarin Therapy (Most Common Cause)

Directly prolongs PT/INR.

3. Liver Disease

Decreased synthesis of clotting factors:

  • II, VII, IX, X
  • V, fibrinogen

4. Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)

5. Factor Deficiencies

  • II, V, VII, X

6. Massive Transfusion

Dilution of clotting factors.

7. Rare Inhibitors

  • Factor VII inhibitor
  • Lupus anticoagulant (rarely affects PT)

LOW PT

Not clinically relevant — normal PT simply indicates adequate extrinsic/common pathway function.

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + Mayo + ARUP + ISTH)

Prothrombin Time (PT)

  • 11 – 15 seconds
    (but varies with reagent sensitivity)

Each lab must provide its own reference range.

INR (International Normalized Ratio)

Standardized measure for warfarin therapy.

Clinical ContextTarget INR
Normal (not on anticoagulants)0.8 – 1.2
Warfarin — most indications2.0 – 3.0
Mechanical mitral valve2.5 – 3.5

Diagnostic Uses

1. Warfarin Monitoring

Primary use of PT/INR.

2. Liver Disease Assessment

Chronic or acute liver failure:

  • PT prolongation is an early clue
  • Reflects decreased hepatic synthesis of clotting factors
  • Most reliable marker of liver synthetic function

3. Suspected Vitamin K Deficiency

Malabsorption, antibiotics, newborn bleeding.

4. Bleeding Disorders

Evaluate extrinsic/common pathway deficits.

5. DIC Workup

PT prolonged alongside:

  • Low fibrinogen
  • Elevated D-dimer
  • Low platelets

6. Preoperative Coagulation Screening

Not routine. Used if:

  • Bleeding history
  • Liver disease
  • Anticoagulant use
  • Malnutrition

7. Newborn Hemorrhagic Disease

Vitamin K deficiency → prolonged PT.

Analytical Notes

  • Blue-top citrate tube (9:1 ratio required)
  • Underfilling → falsely prolonged PT
  • Hemolysis interferes minimally
  • Reagent sensitivity differs between labs
  • INR should not be used for DOAC therapy (rivaroxaban, apixaban)

Clinical Pearls

  • Factor VII has the shortest half-life → PT prolongs early in vitamin K deficiency/warfarin therapy.
  • PT/INR is a crucial prognostic marker in acute liver failure (King’s College criteria).
  • INR is not reliable in pregnancy or in non-warfarin anticoagulation.
  • If PT prolonged but aPTT normal → think factor VII deficiency or early vitamin K deficiency.
  • Repeat PT after vitamin K injection helps differentiate deficiency from liver failure.

Interesting Fact

Vitamin K deficiency first affects factor VII, giving PT high diagnostic sensitivity - this is why PT rises long before aPTT in early deficiency.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Coagulation Testing
  2. ISTH Guidelines - Coagulation Standards
  3. ACCP Guidelines - Anticoagulation Therapy
  4. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Prothrombin Time
  5. ARUP Consult - PT/INR Interpretation
  6. MedlinePlus / NIH - PT Test

Last updated: January 27, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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