Title: Haematology in Primary Care: The Full Blood Count
1Haematology in Primary CareThe Full Blood Count
- Charles Crawley
- George Follows
Cambridge Haematology Partners
2The FBC
3Haemoglobin
- Low haemoglobin defines anaemia
- Males 13-18g/l
- Females 11.5-16g/l
- Variations
- Children
- Neonates 14-24g/l
- 2 months 8.9-13.2g/l
- 9-12ys - 11.5-15.4g/l
- Pregnancy
- 3rd Trimester 9.8-13.7g/l
- Age
- 5-7th decade falls in men rises in women
- Exercise
- Increases Hb
- Altitude
- Smoking
4MCV
- Mean Cell Volume average size of RBC
- Normal adult 76 (80) - 100 fL
- MCV lt 76 fL (microcytic)
- MCV gt 100 fL (macrocytic)
- MCV 80 - 100fL (normocytic)
5Practical Classification of Anaemia
Microcytic (lt76fL) Normocytic Macrocytic (gt100)
Iron deficiency Thalassaemia Haemoglobinopathies Anaemia of chronic disease Lead Hyperthyroidism Blood loss Haemolytic - RBC membrane - Enzyme defects - Extrinsic Stem cell defects Megaloblastic Excess alcohol Hypothyroid Liver disease Reticulocytosis Drug therapy Marrow failure
- Reticulocyte count In the investigation of
anaemia - Reduced Failure of erythropoiesis
- Increased Appropriate BM erythroid response
635 year Male
- Hx Lethargy, SOB
- Sx Pale
- FBC Hb 6.4 g/dL
- MCV 71 fL
- RDW 0.19
- WCC 5.2
- Platelets 375
- Film Severe hypochromasia and microcytosis
7Commonest Causes Iron Deficiency
Female Male
1 5 yr Nutrition Nutrition
5 15 yr Increased utilisation/ growth Increased utilisation/ growth
15 40 yr Menstruation Pregnancy Coeliac disease (Malabsorption)
gt 40 yr Gastrointestinal Blood loss Gastrointestinal Blood loss
8Blood Film
9Differential Diagnosis
- Causes of microcytic hypochromic anaemia
- Iron deficiency
- Blood loss
- Malabsorption - Coeliac disease gastrectomy
- Increased utilisation - parasites
- Dietary deficiency - rare
- Haemoglobinopathy
- Anaemia of chronic disease
10Fe Deficiency vs Anaemia of Chronic Disease
Variable Fe deficiency Chronic disease
Serum Iron ? ?
Transferrin ? ? or Normal
Transferrin Saturation ?? ?
Ferritin ? or Normal ? or normal
CRP Normal ?
GIT studies endoscopy etc
1126 year Female
- Hx Antenatal visit First trimester
- FBC Hb 11.0 g/dL
- MCV 73 fL
- MCH 27 pg
- RDW 0.14
- WCC 8.5 x 109/L
- Platelets 164 x 109/L
- Film Microcytic RBC
12Fe Deficiency vs Hbinopathy
- Check iron status Ferritin
- Family history / ethnicity
- Thalassaemia / haemoglobinopathy
- Need to determine risk to fetus of severe
thalassaemic syndrome (in 1st rimester) - Homozygous thalassaemia (a or ß)
- Homozygous Hb S (sickle cell disease)
- Severe compound heterozygous states
- E.g. HbS/ß HbE/ß HbSC
- Determine need to check partner
13Red Cell Distribution Width (RDW)
- The degree of variation in size of RBC N lt14
- Increased RDW corresponds with anisocytosis
- Iron deficiency (increased RDW is the earliest
lab feature anisocytosis precedes the anaemia) - Megaloblastic anaemia (can be very high gt20)
- Anaemia with bone marrow erythroid response (i.e.
reticulocytosis) - RDW useful in DDx of microcytic anaemias.
- Most cases of iron deficiency raised RDW
- Most cases thalassaemia trait normal RDW
14MCH
- Mean Cell Haemoglobin (27-32 pg)
- The mean haemoglobin per red blood cell
- MCH usually rises or falls as the MCV is
increased or decreased. - MCH lt 25 pg used as a guide to the presence of
thalassaemia or haemoglobinopathy. - MCH usually markedly reduced in thalassaemia
(e.g. beta thalassaemia trait MCH 19 pg)
15Haemoglobin Studies
1. Normal adult 2. HPFH (heterozygote)3. Hb
S--HPFH 4. Hb C--HPFH 5. Normal newborn
A/F/S/C control
1673 year male
- Hx Tiredness
- FBC Hb 4.0 g/dL
- MCV 102 fL
- RDW 0.24
- WCC / Plt Normal
- Film Macrocytes, fragmented red cells,
occasional NRBC
17Blood Film73 yr old male
18Severe Macrocytic Anaemia
- Megaloblastic anaemia
- Liver disease end-stage failure
- Red cell aplasia
- Parvovirus thymoma, other malignancy
- Bone marrow failure or infiltration
- Myelodysplasi
- Multiple myeloma
19Investigations
- 1. Serum vitamin B12
- Red cell folate (serum folate)
- 2. Reticulocyte count (BM erythroid function)
- 3. Liver function
- 4. Parvovirus serology
- 5. Bone marrow examination
20Dont Forget the Alcohol
21Other Causes of Macrocytic Anaemia
- Severe liver disease
- Excess alcohol
- Haemorrhage / haemolysis reticulocytosis
- Drug therapy esp. cytotoxics
- Hypothyroidism
- Myelodysplasia
- Marrow infiltration
- Bone marrow examination may be indicated
22Myelodysplasia (MDS)
- Clonal disorder
- Ineffective haematopoiesis
- Incidence increases with age
- Age 50yrs - 1 per 100,000
- Age 70yrs 25 per 100,000
- RBC, WCC, and platelets affected
23Myelodysplasia
Bone Marrow
Peripheral Blood
24Myelodysplasia
- Prognosis
- Number of cytopenias
- BM Blast percentage
- Cytogenetics
- Age
- Survival
- Varies 11.7 yrs 0.4yrs
- Management
- Supportive
- Stem cell transplantation
- New drugs
25Normocytic Anaemia
- Multiple aetiologies
- Primary marrow production defect
- Myelodysplasia
- Marrow infiltration
- Haematinic deficiencies
- Reduced red cell survival
- Blood loss
- Intrinsic defects (eg. Enzyme membrane)
- Extrinsic defects (eg. Plasma problems)
26Approach to Normocytic Anaemia
- History
- Acute blood loss jaundice dark urine
- Exclude treatable causes
- Check ferritin, folate, vitamin B12
- Renal and hepatic function
- Acute phase reactants
- Consider haemolysis
- The blood film may have the answer !
2778 year male
- Hx Chest pain
- PMHx Myocardial infarct
- FBC Hb 7.2 g/dL
- MCV 97 fL
- WCC 4.5 x 109/L
- Platelets 320 x 109/L
- Reticulocytes 320 (10-100)
-
28Blood Film
29Blood Film
- RBC Spherocytes
- Polychromasia
- Nucleated red cells
- Spherocytic haemolytic anaemia
- Auto-immune haemolytic anaemia
- Hereditary spherocytosis
30Other Investigations
- Biochemistry
- Bilirubin 100 µmol/L (lt20)
- Other LFT Normal
- LDH 1,500 U/L (120-240)
- Haptoglobin lt0.1
- Haematology
- Reticulocyte count
- Direct anti-globulin (Coombs) test Positive
- Enzymes,
- Hereditary spherocytosis screen
31Haemolytic Anaemia
- Primary Red Cell Problem
- Red cell membrane Hereditary spherocytosis
- Enzyme defect G6PD deficiency
- Haemoglobin defect thalassaemia
- Abnormal red cells dyserythropoiesis (MDS)
- Secondary Red Cell Destruction
- Autoimmune
- Severe hepatic dysfunction
- Red cell fragmentation DIC HUS TTP
- Infections malaria clostridium
32Blood Film
blister or helmet cells
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency
33Normocytic Anaemia
- Blood film may have the answer
- Normal red cell morphology
- Dimorphic (high RDW) 2x RBC populations
- Marked anisocytosis marrow dysfunction/MDS
- Is there polychromasia?
- Yes Anaemia with marrow response
- No Impaired marrow response
- Anaemia of Chronic Disease
- BM failure
- Red cell aplasia Parvovirus aplastic anaemia
34Polycythaemia
- Pseudopolycythaemia
- Primary
- Polycythemia vera
- Secondary
- Hypoxia
- Altitude
- Cardiac/Pulmonary disease
- Cirrhosis
- Abnormal Haemoglobins
- Chronic CO exposure
- Inappropriate erythropoietin
- Renal lesions
- Tumours
- Drug
35Clinical Features
- Hyperviscosity
- Headaches
- Blurred vision
- Breathlessness
- Confusion
- (Plethora)
- Thrombosis
- Venous arterial
- Bleeding
- Other
- Pruritis
- Gout
36Polycythaemia investigations
- FBC Film
- CXR
- Cardiac assessment
- Red Cell mass
- Blood gasses
- Major advance JAK 2 mutation screens
37JAK2
- Presence of the V617F mutation indicates that the
patient has an acquired, clonal hematological
disorder and not a reactive or secondary process.
- Absence of the JAK2 V617F mutation does not
exclude a MPD as up to 50 of patients with ET
and IMF will have wildtype JAK2. - The V617F mutation does not help in
sub-classifying the type of MPD of a given
patient
38Pathogenesis Deregulated Tyrosine Kinases in MPD
CML BCR-ABL CMML TEL-PDGFRB CEL
FIP1L1-PDGFRA
SM KIT D816V PV JAK2 V617F ET JAK2
V617F IMF JAK2 V617F
39Questions so far?
40Platelets
- Too many (thrombocytosis)
- Too few (thrombocytopenia)
- Dysfunctional
- When should we worry?
41Thrombocytosis
- gt 450 x 109/l
- Causes
- Reactive (almost anything!)
- Common bleeding, infection, malignancy
- Tend to be less than 1000 x 109/l
- Primary bone marrow disorder
- Myeloproliferative disorders (up to 3000)
- (essential thrombocythaemia, myelofibrosis,
polycythaemia, chronic myeloid leukaemia)
42Thrombocytosis
- History, examination should guide investigations
and referrals - Should the patient be on aspirin?
- Only firm evidence is MPDs
- Reactive often given if gt 1000, but little
evidence for this
43Thrombocytosis
- Essential Thrombocythaemia (ET)
- Long term management balancing thrombotic vs
bleeding risk - Aspirin for intermediate risk
- Cytoreduction aspirin for higher risk
- (beware the pseudohyperkalaemia!!)
44Thrombocytopenia
- Is it real???
- Poor sample
- Clumped in EDTA blood film
- If at all possible confirm with a repeat sample
45Thrombocytopenia
- Pancytopenia
- vs
- Isolated low platelets
- Pancytopenia
- always serious (marrow failure)
- Isolated
- may be relatively unimportant
46Thrombocytopenia
- Decreased production
- Rare in isolation
- Viral infections
- Increased consumption
- Autoimmune ITP
- Drugs
- Pregnancy
- Large spleen / portal hypertension
- Infections (HIV)
- RARE but serious TTP HUS - DIC
47Thrombocytopenia
- Investigations depend on clinical suspicion
- Platelet volume may be helpful
- (small - think marrow)
- lt8.0 and gt10.5
- BM often not required
48Thrombocytopenia
(not joint bleeds!)
49Thrombocytopenia
- How real is the bleeding risk?
- Cause of low platelets
- Wet vs dry purpura
- Platelet transfusions often not useful
50ITP a few useful reminders
- Children
- Acute, post viral,
- spontaneous resolution (often no therapy)
- Adult
- More insidious onset
- Chronic common
- Many (not all!) cases do require treatment
- Steroids splenectomy
- Novel therapies
51Platelet Dysfunction
- Range of rare inherited causes
- Family history
- Refer the child that bleeds abnormally!
- Dont forget the acquired dysfunction
- Renal failure
- Liver disease
- ASPIRIN
52Questions and break!
53White Cells
54White Cells
55White Cells
- Important (and commonly problematic!)
- Neutrophils
- Lymphocytes
- Important (less commonly problematic)
- Monocytes
- eosinophils
- Less important
- basophils
56Neutrophils
57Neutrophilia
- Often result expected
- History
- Examination
- primary haematological cause NOT common
58Neutrophilia
- Infection
- Inflammation / necrosis
- Cancer any sort reported
- Bone marrow disease (MPDs, CML)
- Drugs (steroids!!, growth factors)
- Not always pathological
- Pregnancy, smoking, normal variant!
59Neutropenia (lt1.5 x 109/l)
- Isolated neutropenia
- vs
- Pancytopenia
60How worried should I be?
- Pancytopenia is ALWAYS worrying
- Many cases of isolated neutropenia are less
serious - What should I do with a neutropenic patient?
- How common is neutropenic sepsis?
61Pancytopenia
- Marrow Failure
- Drugs (chemotherapy)
- Infiltration (cancer, MF,lymphoma etc.)
- Myelodysplasia / leukaemia / myeloma
- Aplastic anaemia / PNH
- Dont forget B12 / folate (anorexia)
- Peripheral consumption
- hypersplenism
62Pancytopenia
- Referral usually required
- Bone marrow biopsy usually required
63Isolated Neutropenia
- Not always easy to identify a cause!
- Always think drugs (idiopathic vs dose)
- Viral infection
- Auto-immune disease
- Marrow causes
- (sepsis / very ill elderly)
- Dont forget
- Racial variation
- cyclical neutropenia (clinical and lab details)
- If child, think congenital
64Isolated Neutropenia
- Investigations will depend on clinical
presentation - Chance finding vs ill patient
- Viral serology may be indicated (hepatitis, EBV
etc Think HIV!) - Autoimmune (SLE, sjorgrens, RA Feltys)
- Serial blood counts
- Referral may be required
65Isolated Neutropenia
- When to refer urgently
- Cause of neutropenia
- Is the patient acutely ill?
- Neutropenic fever vs sepsis
- Incidence etc
- Antibiotic policies etc.
- Prophylactic antibiotics - controversial
66Lymphocytes
- Lineage B vs T vs NK
- Origin
- Role
67Lymphocytosis
- Causes
- Reactive
- (CMV, EBV, hepatitis, toxo, adenov)
- Pertussiss
- Inflammatory reaction (not common)
- Lymphoproliferative disorder
- Acute and chronic leukaemias
- lymphomas
68Lymphocytosis
- Priorities for investigation
- Clinical picture
- If other FBC abnormalities, speak to a
haematologist - If in doubt, ask for an opinion on a blood film
- Monospot test vs viral serology
- Flow cytometry
- Molecular tests
69Lymphocytosis (gt4 x 109/l)
vs
vs
- Blasts vs more mature cells
- Clinical picture very important
- Young sick child vs older well patient
70Lymphocytosis
- Young patient with clinical picture of infectious
mononucleosis - Monospot useful
- Film useful (rule out ALL)
- Flow cytometry less helpful
- Serology as second line investigation
- ID referral occasionally required
- (worth thinking about acute HIV)
71Lymphocytosis
- Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia
- Children gtgt adults
- Often presents very acutely
- Range of clinical features
- Laboratory features typical
- Referral mandatory
72Lymphocytosis
- Older patient with lymphocytosis
- Blood film required (CLL vs LGL)
- Flow cytometry usually required
- ? Refer
- Clinical picture
- Underlying diagnosis
73Lymphocytosis
- CLL
- Relatively common (300 / year)
- New entity of Monoclonal B Lymphocytosis (MBL)
- Age
- Clinical presentation
- Asymptomatic stage A
- VS
- Symptomatic stage C
74Lymphocytosis
- CLL
- History
- Night sweats, weight loss, INFECTIONS
- Examination
- Lymphadenopathy, hepato-splenomegaly
- Investigation
- Flow cytometry
75Lymphocytosis
76Lymphocytosis
- Should I refer CLL?
- Long stage A phase in many patients
- Patients and the leukaemia word!
- Rough guide
- Symptomatic
- Unusual / lymphoma phenotype
- Lymphadenopathy / splenomegaly
- Lymphocyte doubling time lt 12 months
- with lymphocytes gt 30 x 109/l
- Hb lt 10 g/dl (or haemolysing)
- Platelets lt 100x 109/l
77Lymphocytosis
- CLL beware
- Not always benign
- Infections (hypogamma)
- Haemolysis
- ITP
78Lymphocytosis
- Rarer lymphoproliferative disorders
- LGL
- PLL
- Leukaemic phase of most lymphomas
- Hairy cell leukaemia
79Lymphopenia (lt1.0 x 109/l)
- Many cases reflect normal variants
- How hard should you chase a cause?
- More common causes
- HIV / hepatitis / Hodgkins (steroids)
- Rarer causes
- Autoimmune disease / sarcoidosis
80Lymphopenia
- Investigations
- Clinical picture
- Lymphocyte subset analysis
- RARE bone marrow
81Enlarged LN ? cause
- Clinical context is critical
- ? Symptom profile
- (?spleen)
- Please do first line investigations
- FBC may save a LN biopsy
- Neck nodes ENT fast track referral
- Axillary and groin nodes
- Much depends on the clinical context
- Haematology review first?
- Biopsy first?
- CT first?
82Eosinophils
- High
- Allergic disorders
- Drug Hypersensitivity
- Skin Diseases
- Parasitic infections
- Myeloproliferative disorders
- Connective tissue disorders
- Churg Strauss
83Monocytes
- High
- Range of infectious and inflammatory stimuli
- Primary BM conditions
- CMML (overlap between myelodysplasia and
myeloproliferative disorder) - CML
- Clinical picture and blood film important
- If no clear cause consider haematology referral
84Questions?
Cambridge Haematology Partners www.cambridgehaema
tology.com charles.crawley_at_cambridgehaematology.c
om george.follows_at_cambridgehaematology.com