Title: 7262005 Clinical Pathology Conference: to plasmapheresis or not
17-26-2005 Clinical Pathology Conference to
plasmapheresis or not?
2Chief Complaint
- Presented to an outside hospital with progressive
fatigue and weakness 1 week prior to transfer to
MCG. - Found with malignant hypertension, severe
anemia (Hgb 4-6 g/dL), acute renal failure with
Cr 3 increased retics and LDH, and decreased
haptoglobin.
3History of Present Illness
- 41 year old African-American male whose
creatinine has been slowly increasing with
decreasing hemoglobin which resulted in admission
to the Eisenhower Medical Center MICU 6/23/2005
with a hypertensive emergency. - Progressive fatigue weakness x 1 month, SOB
with exertion. - His malignant htn was brought under control,
and although he had some drop in his platelets he
never had thrombocytopenia. - Dx HUS due to Gemzar treatment for
adenocarcinoma. - 7/1/2005 He was transfered from the outside
medical center after no response to transfusion,
and steroids. Plasmapheresis could not be done
there so transfer to MCG.
4Past Medical History
- No prior Hx of htn, and with a nl baseline
creatinine. - H/O chronic L. cephalic v. thrombosis, on
lifelong coumadin. - H/O head neck squamous ca with brain mets dx
1997 (rad neck diss). Craniotomy, gamma knife
1998. 1998 treated with dilantin with ensuing ARF
that required temporary dialysis. - Nov. 2004, presented with pancoast tumor
(adenoca) and small bowel adenoca (resection). - Dx of metastatic adenoca of unknown primary.
- The pancoast tumor was treated with 4 cycles of
carboplatin/taxol which failed, so Gemzar
(Gemcitabine) started Jan. 2005, and he got 6
doses (last dose early June 14, 2005). - No gemzar 6-21-2005, but got 2 U PRBCs for anemia.
5Medications/Family History/Social History
- Oldest brother and father with hypertension.
- Smokes 2 ppd x 20 yrs.
- Retired from the army.
6MCG admit physical exam
- T 36.8, RR 18, HR 72, BP 116/65.
- Alert, oriented, NAD.
- No scleral icterus.
- No peripheral edema.
- No hepatosplenomegaly.
- Nail bed pallor.
7MCG laboratory findings
- 7/1/2005
- H/H 8.5/24, plt 215K, retic 3.6, T.bili 0.8,
LDH 951, BUN/Cr 68/6.7, haptoglobin O pos/Ab scrn neg. aPTT 35.5, PT 12.9. MCV 90.6,
MCHC 34.9 - Peripheral smear mod. Schistocytes (all smears
had sl-mod schistos with the last with sl
schistos). - Plt nadir 46K on 7-9-2005 then steady increase to
240K at D/C 7-21-2005. - LDH highest (951) 7-1-2005,fluctuated,435 on
D/C. - BUN/Cr fluctuated but slight increase at D/C,
43/9.2 - Highest T. bili was 1.3.
- Haptoglobin stayed low.
- VMA, normetanephrines, metanephrines low-nl.
ANA neg. vit. B12 nl.
8MCG laboratory findings
- 7/19/2005, kidney biopsy
- Thrombotic microangiopathy, severe with
mod-severe acute tubular injury, and mild-mod
diffuse interstitial fibrosis (no platelet-fibrin
thrombi, capillary loops empty), arterioles are
obstructed by swollen endothelial cells with
focal fibrinoid necrosis and mucoid intimal
change, tortuous vessels suggest background htn).
Cause HUS (gemzar)? Malig htn? Other?
9Our pts. Renal biopsy, H E
10Initial impression
- Not a straighforward case of HUS (no
thrombocytopenia). - The history of malignant htn brings a MAHA
component into DDX. - Not an ongoing hemolysis since bili not elevated,
and discrepant with LDH of 950 (from tumor?).
11MCG hospital Course
- 7-1-2005
- Prednisone, heparin protocol.
- Femoral catheter placed at outside hospital.
- Daily plasmapheresis initiated 7-1-2005 with type
compatible FFP replacement. - Nephrology consult with daily dialysis started.
- Blood pressure control.
- 7-4-2005, 2 U PRBCs. 7-8-2005 1 U PRBCs.
- 7-5-2005, platelets begin to decline
(plasmapheresis 5). - 7-9-2005, Plt 46K, heparin discontinued (HIT abs
neg), Argatroban started (stopped 7-14-2005). - 7-9-2005, blood pressure 250/130 and reportedly
labile since pt been here, plasmapheresis held
(reminded hem-onc that protein bound meds removed
by plasmapheresis and to dose drugs after, with
better control afterwards).
12MCG hospital Course
- 7-10-2005 plt 67K, plasmapheresis 8
- 7-11-2005 plt 80K, plasmapheresis 9 (last one,
suspect MAHA due to malig htn). BP nl, H/H stable
(10/28.3), BUN/ Cr 65/7.3, LDH 541. - 7-15-2005
- Htn normalized, hgb stable, plt 103K, prednisone
taper, 2 U PRBCs. - Spiked fever, MSSA in blood catheter urine.
Femoral line removed IV abx started. - 7-19-2005
- Right tunnel HD catheter placed for continued
intravenous abx and dialysis for ESRD (renal
consult recovery unlikely). - D/C 7-21-2005 with normalized vital signs (htn
controlled with medication), stable anemia (hgb
8.1), and neg blood cultures, for home care abx
therapy. Transfused with 2 U PRBCs without
problems.
13DDX Normochromic Normocytic Anemia routine data
- Anemia due to hemolysis or bleeding has a normal
or slightly elevated MCV and an appropriate
reticulocyte index. - Anemia with a normal MCV and a low retic index
DDX renal failure, anemia of inflammation/malig.,
early iron def., combined iron def.megalobl.
anemia, sideroblastic anemia, myelophthisis, and
bleeding or hemolysis plus one of the previous.
14Anemia of renal failure
- Unusual with creatinine less than 3.
- Hct is variable, even in severe renal failure,
from the low teens to the mid-30s. - Decreased marrow erythropoiesis due to decreased
erythropoietin or uremic toxins. - Smear may show burr cells, and an occasional
microangiopathic smear. - Mild thrombocytopenia, 90-140K, in severe renal
insufficiency.
15DDX Normochromic Normocytic Anemia
- Blood loss no signs in this patient.
16DDX Normochromic Normocytic Anemia
- Hemolysis
- An the absence of bleeding with a normocytic
anemia and increased reticulocytosis suggests
hemolysis. - Intravascular
- Hemoglobinemia, hemoglobinuria,
hypohaptoglobinemia, hemisiderinuria. Elevated
LDH, but nonspecific. - Seen in microangiopathic hemolysis, burns, AHTR
...
17DDX Normochromic Normocytic Anemia
- Extravascular Hemolysis
- Most hemolytic events arent intravascular.
- No hemoglobinemia, hemoglobinuria, or
hemosiderinuria. Haptoglobin only partly
saturated. Maybe indirect hyperbilirubinemia
(direct in biliary obstruction or liver disease,
and indirect in hemolytic anemia when other liver
function tests normal) - Often only presumptive evidence.
- Seen in immune hemolysis, DHTR,
hemoglobinopathies, hypersplenism ...
18DDX Normochromic Normocytic Anemia
- Anemia of chronic disease
- One of the most common mechanisms.
- Any chronic, or acute inflammatory state.
- Similar mechanism in cancer patients.
- Mech decreased rbc survival, decreased
erythropoietic activity, and abnormal iron
kinetics.
19DDX Normochromic Normocytic Anemia
- Reduced marrow production.
- This patient had a low reticulocyte index, about
2, on admit. - Normal retic count with normal Hct is 1.
- Marrow can triple its rbc production almost
immediately in response to acute blood loss or
hemolysis. - To correct retic count for anemia
- Retic index retic X pt. Hct/nl. Hct.
- Retic index is least 3 is an appropriate marrow
response to anemia.
20DDX Normochromic Normocytic Anemia
- Peripheral smear help
- Can check for marrow response.
- Red cells may suggest etiology.
- Spherocytes in large numbers may be immune
hemolysis, hereditary spherocytosis, hemoglobin C
hemoglobinopathy. - Hereditary elliptocytosis.
- Schistocytes in microangiopathic states if 1
rbc in right clinical setting (schistos common in
renal dz but usually - Mech lesions produce high shear forces, or
produce inflammation that make fibrin strands. - Coombs test
- Done when immune hemolysis is suspected.
21DDX hemolysis with fragmented red cells on the
peripheral smear
- Macrovascular hemolysis (mechanical disruption).
- MAHA (TTP, HUS, DIC, malignant htn, vasculitis,
disseminated carcinomatosis, vascular
malformations). HELLP syndrome Rx deliver fetus. - If accompanied by significant thrombocytopenia
think of DIC, HUS, TTP(A destructive
thrombocytopenia will show ample marrow megas and
large platelets in smear). - Treat all fragmentation hemolysis by Rx of
underlying mech.
22Thrombocytopenia DDX
- Routine data plt count, HP, smear, /- marrow
exam - Decreased survival/consumption, sequestration
(large plt on smear, inc. megas). - Thrombotic microangiopathy (isolated platelet
consumption due to endothelial injury or
increased plt activation) - TTP/HUS.
- Intravascular activation of coagulation cascade
by malignant hypertension, sepsis, shock, toxin
exposure, malignancy - DIC.
- Immune thrombocytopenia (if severe,
- Hypersplenism (anemia not usually significant),
abnormal vessels, prostheses. - Decreased production (small plt on smear, dec.
megas). - Myelophthisis (if severe, leukemia).
- Primary marrow disorders (if severe, aplastic anem).
- Infection.
- Marrow depressant drugs.
- Ineffective production (variable plt size, nl or
inc. megas). - Megaloblastic process.
23Septicemia
- Infection may decrease platelet production.
- Endotoxin will cause platelet capillary
sequestration.
24DIC
- In acute DIC, thrombocytopenia is essentially
always present and often the first symptom. - Marrow may compensate if the DIC is chronic, and
coag factors may be low or normal. - Best clinical example of chronic DIC is
metastatic usually adenoca - hypercoagulable phenomena including migrating
thrombophlebitis with platelet rich microthrombi
(Trousseaus syndrome mechs include tumor
expressing tissue factor and tumor procoagulant).
Trousseaus Rx is to treat tumor. Often precedes
cancer dx. - Intravascular clotting may be initiated by
release or increase of thromboplastic substances
into circulation in malignancy and tissue
ischemia for example. - Lab clotting factors consumed (low fibrinogen
and increased D-dimer, distinguishes it from
TTP/HUS) platelets consumed, fibrinolysis
activated. PT, PTT, TT, abnormal with rbc
fragments (schistocytes and spherocytes). - Widespread intravascular coagulation and bleeding.
25DDX immune thrombocytopenia
- Primary (ITP/autoimmune thrombocytopenic purpura)
- Viral or bacterial infection
- Collagen vascular diseases
- Lymphoproliferative disorders
- Immunodeficiency
- Drugs (to treat just stop the drug)
- Heparin
- Dilantin
- Lasix
- Others
26Thrombotic microangiopathy
- Direct platelet consumption triggered by
endothelial injury and platelet aggregation VS.
direct activation of coag pathway in DIC. - Thrombosis of capillaries and arterioles.
- Most thrombi are mostly platelets and scant
fibrin. - Norm coag levels with little prolongation of PT
or aPTT. - MAHA.
- Thrombocytopenia.
- Sometimes renal failure with platelet or
platelet-fibrin thrombi in renal arteries or
glomeruli and necrosis of vessel walls. - Classic childhood HUS assoc intestinal infection
(O157H7 verocytotoxin producing E. coli). - Adult HUS assoc infection, antiphospholipid abs,
preg. compl., metastatic carcinoma, chemo,
immunosuppression, vascular renal disease such as
scleroderma and htn, and idiopathic...) - Thrombocytopenia, MAHA, and renal failure also
seen in vasculitis (but usually other Sxs too),
and malig htn (hx uncontrolled htn w/ diastolic
130).
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32TTP/HUS
- Rare.
- Marked platelet consumption accelerated by
platelet-fibrin thrombi leads to microangiopathic
hemolysis with schistocytes. - Dx usually clinical and lab (/- renal bx).
- Classic TTP pentad fever, thrombocytopenia,
MAHA, transient neurologic symptoms, and renal
failure. - Renal failure prominent in HUS (with assoc MAHA
and thrombocytopenia). - Only MAHA and thrombocytopenia needed to DX TTP.
- TTP usually adults spares kidneys. TTP/HUS
adults usually idiopathic. - HUS usually kids with kidneys Sxs prominent and
absence of neuro. Sxs. Abx may increase toxin
release and HUS. - TTP/HUS difference is the location of thrombi.
33TTP/HUS
- Lab notably, PT and PTT normal or sl inc.
- Platelet, fibrin aggregates in the arterioles and
capillaries with thickened walls, endothelial
swelling and proliferation, fibrin deposits in
lumen, arteriole fibrinoid necrosis, intimal
hyperplasia. Morphology similar to malig htn (/-
htn). - Smear has schistocytes, reticulocytosis, usually
severe thrombocytopenia. - LDH and bilirubin elevated.
- Coombs neg.
- DIC may occur as renal failure ensues.
34TTP/HUS
- Cause
- Deficiency or antibodies of vWF cleaving
protease, ADAMTS-13 gene, or endothelial injury. - Protease normally cleaves large vWF multimer into
smaller multimers in the blood. - vWF normally unfolds in circulation when it binds
to damaged endothelium, or when the shear stress
is increased in arterioles and capillaries. - Unfolded vWF is them cleaved by the protease.
- When protease is deficient, the vWF multimers
unfold in the arterioles and capillaries and
induce direct plt aggregation and microvascular
thrombi which fragment rbcs. - No approved test for the protease yet.
35TTP/HUS
- ADAMT-13 protease deficiency can be congenital or
acquired. - Congenital chronic, relapsing TTP.
- Acquired
- Trigger infection, drugs (Gemcitabine (Gemzar),
Mitomycin, Cisplatin, Bleomycin, Ticlopidine),
immune system abnormalities (SLE, HIV). - Chemotherapeutic agents also lead to
myelosuppression. - Leads to IgG autoimmune reaction to ADAMTS-13
protease. - Reaction usually transient and a single episode.
36TTP/HUS
- Management Goals
- May be irreversible (mortality today
- Replace ADAMTS-13 protease.
- Remove the antibodies.
- Plasma Exchange does both (first line Rx for
TTP). - FFP infusion can be used.
- But the Abs remain in the blood.
- Not as effective as plasma exchange.
- Can be used for congenital deficiency of
ADAMTS-13 protease. - Plasma exchange
- Start early. Usually about 9 procedures (5-80
reported). - For TTP, do daily until platelets increase and
LDH to normal for 2-3 days. Too soon and may
relapse. - Malig assoc TMA shows mod or transient
improvement, so Rx is reduce tumor burnden.
37TTP/HUS
- In adult HUS ARF is usually more severe,
plasmapheresis is not as successful, but because
of overlap with TTP, plasmapheresis ASAP. - Hemodialysis is used to manage many child HUS
pts, and most patients recover in a few weeks.
If mild only fluid electrolyte mgmnt necessary. - Plasmapheresis for HUS is performed until plt inc
and renal improves. - Immunosuppression
- Some success (steroids, rituxan, vincristine).
- Platelet transfusion
- Contraindicated
- Exacerbates platelet thrombi formation
- Patients generally dont bleed so use only in
life threatening hemorrhage.
38TTP/HUS
- Fibrin stain.
- Platelet-fibrin thrombi (red) in glomerular
capillaries.
39Hypertensive emergencies
- Diastolic pressure 120-140 is severe and should
be acutely reduced. - Initial concern is identification of end-organ
damage. - CNS, cardiopulmonary, renal
- Secondary htn emergencies to treat
- CNS vascular event, renal failure,
pheochromocytoma, renal artery stenosis. - Occasionally malig htn presents as MAHA, renal
insuff, and thrombocytopenia. Mech is endothelial
injury, fibrin strands from and shear rbcs, trap
plts.
40Hypertensive emergencies
- Lab
- Cardinal sign of acute hypertensive nephropathy
is unrecognized elevation or serum creatinine in
the presence of severe hypertension. - Urinalysis shows hematuria.
- Anemia suggests pre-existing renal disease.
- Microangiopathic hemolysis is common.
- Malignant arteriosclerosis small muscular
arteries show segmental dilation and smooth
muscle necrosis, loss of endothelial integrity,
fibrinoid necrosis, rapid prolif of smooth muscle
(onion skinning), - Rx renal insuff
- Significant recovery may occur with blood
pressure control and supporting dialysis.
41My impression
- Multiple complex interacting disease processes.
- Young male with a probable chronic anemia of
malignancy, and renal failure. Renal failure
itself may have a microangiopathic smear. - Chronic hypertension as seen on renal biopsy.
- Metastatic adenocarcinoma may have associated
chronic DIC with MAHA (Trousseaus syndrome) - Marrow response low for the degree of anemia.
- Acute spikes of hypertension produce
microvascular endothelial injury, especially of
the kidneys, with platelet consumption and MAHA. - Rx Start plasmapheresis and monitor since maybe
HUS-TTP, but HUS is associated with malignancy,
renal vascular hypertension and Gemzar, and not
much success is reported. - So support renal function with dialysis, control
bp and malignancy all of which require aggressive
treatment for good outcomes and which are
potentially reversible forms of TMA, and chronic
DIC.