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Title: AUTOIMMUNE HAEMOLYTIC ANAEMIA
Description: Autoimmune haemolytic anaemia is a topic many find difficult; but it does not have to be. Just a click clears your doubt
Description: Autoimmune haemolytic anaemia is a topic many find difficult; but it does not have to be. Just a click clears your doubt
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AUTOIMMUNE HAEMOLYTIC
ANAEMIA
BY
DR IHEJI CHUKWUNONSO
OUTLINE
Introduction
Epidemiology
Classification/ Causes
Pathophysiology
Clinical features
Diagnosis
Treatment
Prognosis
References
Literature review
INTRODUCTION
Autoimmune haemolytic anaemia (AIHA) can be defined as a ↓
Hb conc, resulting from a shortened RBC lifespan, caused by
autoantibodies directed against antigens on the patient's RBCs
...
The degree of haemolysis can vary considerably and may occur
in the absence of anaemia
...
In the paediatric population, it is commoner in the
early years of life when it can develop following viral
infections and vaccinations
EPIDEMIOLOGY
Incidence: 1-3 per 100,000 annually
Age:
- Children: generally < 5 years of age, male more
common
- Adults: generally ≥ 65 years of age, female more
common
Race: None (Nig Study)
Type: 70-80% warm reactive
15-20% cold reactive
10% mixed-type
CLASSIFICATION
Based 0n aetiology
Primary (idiopathic) AIHA: Accounts for
>50% of cases
Secondary (associated) AIHA
• Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)
• Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL)
• Evans Syndrome (ES) – AIHA + ITP
• Drug induced eg ά-methyldopa, penicillins
• Post-infection
Classification contd
Based on DAT reaction:
Warm-Reactive (wAIHA)
Cold-Reactive AIHA (cAIHA)
• Cold Agglutinin Disease (CAS)
• Paroxysmal Cold Haemoglobinuria (PCH)
Mixed-type
wAIHA
Acute (Trasient)
Chronic
Last 3 - 6 months
More prolonged
Age: 2 - 12yr
course, upto years
Infants and >12yrs
Very rare
Accounts for 50-70% of
cases
Usually preceded by an
infection, esp
respiratory
Usually follow systemic
diseases eg SLE
Acute Contd
Chronic Contd
The spleen is usually
Slenomegally not common
enlarged and is the primary
site of destruction of
immunoglobulin G (IgG)–
coated RBCs
...
the response to
glucocorticoids is variable
and inconsistent
...
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
AIHA can be caused by a number of different classes
of antibody, with IgG and IgM being the main
causative classes
...
IgG is not very effective at activating complement
and effectively binds the Fc receptor (FcR) of
phagocytic cells, Therefore AIHA involving IgG is
generally characterized by phagocytosis of RBCs
...
IgM also leads to phagocytosis of RBCs however,
because phagocytic cells have receptors for the
bound complement (rather than FcRs as in IgG
AIHA)
...
Phagocytic AIHA is termed extravascular, whereas
complement-mediated lysis of RBCs is termed
intravascular AIHA
...
Each IgM molecule has the potential to activate a C1
molecule so that large amounts of complement are found
on the RBCs in cold agglutinin disease
...
AIHA cannot be attributed to any single
autoantibody
...
Antibodies with high activity at physiological
temperature (approximately 37 °C) are termed
warm autoantibodies
...
Patients with cold-type AIHA, therefore, have higher
disease activity when body temperature falls into a
hypothermic state
...
The range of temperature associated with RBC
agglutination is called the thermal amplitude
...
When very high titers of cold antibodies are present and
active near body temperature, severe intravascular
hemolysis with hemoglobinemia and hemoglobinuria
may occur and be heightened on a patient's exposure to
cold
...
A minimum of 260–500 molecules of IgG
per cell is necessary on the RBC membrane to
produce a positive reaction
...
It mat be extremely difficult to find compatible
blood; blood with the least in vitro reaction by the
Coombs technique should be chosen
...
Failure to transfuse a profoundly anaemic infant
may lead to serious morbidity and even death
...
Some wAIHA are self limiting; while most responds
to corticosteriod
cAIHA has the poorest prognosis
The prognosis of the Secondary type depends on the
primary illness
...
D
...
D
...
D
...
D
...
D
...
56(1):61–69
The records of 80 children with autoimmune hemolytic
anemia (AHA) followed up in the Centre Departmental
de Transfusion Sanguine, Boulevard Diderot, Paris,
France between 1962 and 1971 were reviewed
...
Predominance among males was noted
...
Two main clinical patterns were
distinguished: an acute transient type and a
prolonged chronic type
...
High titer cold agglutinins were very
rarely observed
...
Although the onset was sometimes dramatic, all the
patients with acute transient type recovered rapidly
...
2 per cent
...
Corticosteroid
therapy was of constant effectiveness in transient
cases but its results were variable in chronic cases
...
Response was favorable in
patients with significant splenic sequestration of
51Cr-labeled red cells
...
By Salawu L and Durosinmi MA
Afr J Med Med Sci
...
Aim: The study was aimed at investigating the
pattern of presentation and management outcome of
patients with AHA seen over a period of 10 years
(June 1988 to May 1998) at the Obafemi Awolowo
University Teaching Hospitals Complex, Ile-Ife
...
Diagnosis was based on laboratory features of haemolytic
anaemia and/or a positive direct anti-human globulin
(Coombs') test after excluding other causes of haemolytic
anaemia
...
13
patients with AHA (7 females, 6 males) aged 6-70 (median,
42) years were identified
...
Laboratory evidence of haemolysis (bone marrow erythroid
hyperplasia and hyperbilirubinaemia) was found in all cases,
while the direct Coomb's test was positive in 10 (76
...
All the patients had moderate-severe anaemia within
the course of the disease, requiring blood
transfusion
...
Follow-up period post-remission
ranged between 1 and 78 months
...
It also shows that
steroid therapy (prednisolone) is quite effective,
especially, in idiopathic AHA, and that red cell
transfusion could be useful in life-threatening
anaemia
...
Kliegman, Richard E
...
Jenson, Bonita F
...
Nelson Textbook of
Paediatrics e-dition 18th Ed, 2007; Saunders
Elsevier, Philadelphia
Azubuike JC
...
, Paediatrics and
Child Health in a Tropical Region, 2nd ed, 2007;
African Educational Services, Owerri, Nigeria
Michel M
...
2011 Dec;4(6):60718
Title: AUTOIMMUNE HAEMOLYTIC ANAEMIA
Description: Autoimmune haemolytic anaemia is a topic many find difficult; but it does not have to be. Just a click clears your doubt
Description: Autoimmune haemolytic anaemia is a topic many find difficult; but it does not have to be. Just a click clears your doubt