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The Evolving Landscape of Microangiopathic Hemolytic Anemia J. Christian Barrett, M.D. Division of Hematology, Oncology, and Palliative Care The Evolving Landscape of MAHA • Objectives – Compare and contrast the physiologic mechanisms of the causes of microangiopathic hemolytic anemia – Select an appropriate management strategy for a microangiopathic hemolytic anemia Case #1 • 67 year old woman with history of scleroderma and Raynaud’s syndrome – – – – – – – Chronic abdominal pains and bloating Fell out of her chair with significant tonic seizures. BP 188/74 during seizure in ED 136/71 minutes later Platelet count 36,000 with creatinine of 3.8 Peripheral smear schistocytes with Haptoglobin <8 with LDH 663 CT head negative MRI/MRA with minor stenosis bilateral ICA Additional pre-therapy labs returning over fist several days • • • • • • ADAMTS13 level 56% PT/PTT and fibrinogen normal normal C3, C4, and CH50 complement levels Antiphospholipid antibody panel was negative ANA 1:2560 centromeric Therapy (over the span of 3 weeks) – – – – Plasmapheresis plus steroids after rheumatology consultation ACE-inhibitor Rituximab x 2 doses Eculizumab. Microangiopathic Hemolytic Anemia • Intravascular hemolytic process – Reticulocytosis – Elevated LDH – Reduced haptoglobin Fibrin and platelet-rich thrombi occluding vessel Fragmented red blood cells a.k.a. schistocytes Microangiopathic Hemolysis: Fragmented RBCs Microangiopathic Hemolytic Anemia • Pathology General Findings – Arteriolar and capillary wall thickening – Subendothelial protein and cellular debri – Fibrin and platelet rich thrombi occluding vessel The G3 of MAHA • Disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC) • Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) • Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) Disseminated Intravascular Coagulopathy (DIC) • Rapid and massive activation of coagulation – fibrin deposition • Consumption of platelets and factors • Generation of fibrin split products • Results in hemorrhage and thrombosis – Balance differs acute vs. chronic • End-organ damage Sepsis and DIC Direct vascular injury Endotoxins Tissue Factor Bacteria Hypoperfusion shock tissue necrosis Tissue Factor Initiates Coagulation XII Tissue Factor XI IX VII VIII X V II (ProthrombinThrombin) I (FibrinogenFibrin) XIII Stable fibrin clot Acute DIC • Laboratory Testing – Prolonged aPTT, PT, TT – Low fibrinogen – Increased fibrin split products (D-dimers) – Thrombocytopenia – Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia • MINOR AND VARIABLE COMPONENT Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (TTP) • Classic Pentad – – – – – Microangiopathic Hemolytic Anemia Thrombocytopenia CNS involvement Renal Involvement Fever NOTE: Only need the first two criteria as entry to consideration Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (TTP) • >90% mortality if untreated • Treatment is plasmapheresis • Deficiency of von Willebrand cleaving enzyme ADAMTS 13 and VWF WeilberlPalade bodies Alphagranules ultralarge vWF ADAMTS-13 (vWF cleaving enzyme) Ultra-large vWF Smaller vWF forms Figure 4. Scheme depicting the role of shear stress and ADAMTS13 in regulating the interaction between VWF and platelets. Tsai H JASN 2003;14:1072-1081 ©2003 by American Society of Nephrology Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (TTP) • Pathogenesis – Deficiency of von Willebrand cleaving enzyme • Ultralarge molecular weight vWF multimers (ULVWF) – Not cleaved as normally would be – ULVWF promote platelet aggregation – Result is microthrombi hemolysis and platelet consumption Inciting event “second hit”???? Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS) • Hemolytic anemia with schistocytes • Thrombocytopenia • Renal impairment (elevated creatinine) – However, any organ can be affected • • • • 10% with CNS manifestations 3% with Cardiac (MI) 5% multi-organ failure Digital ischemic gangrene NOTE: Need not be acute onset Anemia and thrombocytopenia not absolute Classic HUS (aka “Post-Diarrheal”* HUS) • Usually seen in children or pregnant women • Can occur in epidemic forms – Shiga-like toxin-producing E. coli O157:H7 • Clinically looks like TTP involving only the kidney – No CNS symptoms – Marked renal impairment – Low mortality (virtually none if treated) *Use caution with D+ versus D- designations Classic Shiga-like Toxin HUS • Shiga-like toxin E.coli – 92% of cases are seasonal May-November • Overall hospitalization rate 17% • HUS occurs ~7-10 days after infection Classic Shiga-like Toxin HUS Strain variation – E.coli O157:H7 • HUS in 5-15% of cases • Children especially susceptible to HUS – elderly to dying • Antibiotics potentially harmful and NOT helpful – STX gene within antibiotic-inducible prophages – E.coli O104:H4 • HUS in 22% • 88% of HUS cases in young women • Antibiotics do help decrease STX production Classic Shiga-like Toxin HUS • STX structure – A subunit = enzymatic subunit – B subunit = cell-binding subunit – Organized in pentamers • B-subunit binds… – Globotriaosylceramide GB3 membrane receptors • Glomerular endothelium • Tubular epithelium Classic Shiga-like Toxin HUS • Pathogenesis – Internalized – Transport to endoplasmic reticulum – Enzymatic A subunit has N-glycosidase activity • Removes an adenosine from 28S ribosomal RNA • Inhibits cellular protein synthesis Classic Shiga-like Toxin HUS • Pathogenesis – Cellular apoptosis and necrosis • Inflammation with cellular adhesion • Tissue factor release • Decreased thrombomodulin expression – Thrombotic microangiopathy Atypical HUS • Familial • Onset at any age – Slight childhood predominance (60% of cases) • 70% of childhood cases occur before the age of 2 years • Inciting event – Viral illness (URI or gastroenteritis) – Pregnancy (esp. post-partum period) Noris, M. et al. (2012) STEC-HUS, atypical HUS and TTP are all diseases of complement activation Nat. Rev. Nephrol..2012.195 Activation and inactivation of the alternative complement pathway. Atkinson J P , and Goodship T H J Exp Med 2007;204:1245-1248 © 2007 Rockefeller University Press Factor H Mutations Atypical HUS Pathogenesis • Quantitative or qualitative deficiencies of the alternative complement pathway – Fluid phase proteins • CFI, CFH • C3 and CFB (qualitative defects only with these) – Membrane bound proteins • MCP and Thrombomodulin www.inkling.com www.kidneypathology.com.ar/01.htm Why the Kidneys? • Fenestrated monolayer of endothelium • Lower DAF and CD59 expression • Reduced thrombomodulin/tissue factor ratio aHUS and DGKE Mutations • Diacylglycerol kinase-e – Phosphorylates arachidonic acid-containing diacylglycerol phophatidic acid aHUS and DGKE Mutations Lemeire, M, et al. Nat Genet. 2013 May;45(5):531-6. Other Causes of HUS • Other Infections – HIV – Streptococcal pneumoniae – H1N1 influenza A • Medications – Gemcitabine – Cyclosporin – Tacrolimus (and other calcineurin inhibitors) The G3 MAHA Revisited • aHUS ➤ DIC – Thrombotic microangiopathy dominates • Renal dominates o Consumptive – Coagulation activated coagulopathy dominates • Bleeding o Thrombotic microangiopathy minor part of picture – Complement alternative pathway abnormalities • But not consumed • TTP – Thrombotic microangiopathy dominates • Renal affected – Coagulation activated • But not consumed – ADAMTS13 deficient Scleroderma Renal Crisis • Endothelial damage – Unknown mechanism – Immune-mediated? • Increased in patients with corticosteroid exposure? • Reduced in patients with ACE-I therapy? – Platelet and coagulation activation – Fibrinoblastic and non-fibroblastic connective tissue proliferation proliferative endarteropathy • “onion-skin” vascular injury – Small vessel injury >>> glomerular injury Patient 1 Revisited Homozygous for CFHR1-CFHR3 deletions Case #2 • 65 year old woman – TTP diagnosed 4 years prior with ADAMTS13 86% – AMI 3 years prior – DVT and PTE 1 year prior – Weakness with falls – Chronic intermittent headaches Antiphospholipid Syndrome • A Clinical-pathologic Diagnosis – At least one test positive for an antiphospholipid • Repeated at least 12 weeks later • Less than 5 years before the clinical event • Moderate to High Titer – Presence of Disease Manifestation • Arterial thrombosis • Venous Thrombosis • Pregancy morbidity – Three+ losses <10 weeks gestation otherwise not explained – One loss >10 weeks gestation (morphologically normal fetus) – One+ premature birth <34weeks due to pre-eclampsia, eclampsia, placental insufficiency Antiphospholipid Syndrome • Anti-B2GPI/B2GPI complex – Binds receptors on endothelial cells and platelets • Reduced nitric oxide production • Increases tissue factor expression • Platelet activation and aggregation – Inhibition of anticoagulation • Disruption of the thrombomodulin-Protein C system on endothelial surface – Inhibition of fibrinolysis • Blocks B2GPI from acting as a cofactor for tPA – Activation of complement • Immune complexes activate classical pathway (C1q) – Tissue factor expression – Platelet storage granule and microparticle release Case #3 History: 50 year-old AAM consulted to see for possible TTP/HUS 2 weeks of progressive DOE and fatigue URI symptoms about 2 weeks ago that improved with supportive care, but DOE progressed even as his URI symptoms improved. 10-lbs unintentional weight loss in past month or so. PMH: HTN Lisinopril 20 mg daily HCTZ 25 mg daily Physical Examination: VS: T36.3, HR 106, BP 132/52, SpO2 97% on RA Eyes + Conjunctival pallor. No scleral icterus. Case #3 Labs: WBC 3.8, Hgb 4.1, HCT 11.0, Plts 89K, MCV 108.3 Differential: Neu 48.2% Lym 48.1% BMP within normal limits (Cr 0.76). Liver panel Total bili 3.1 Direct bili 0.5 ALP 77 ALT 63 AST 268 PTT 26 PT 11.0 INR 1.1 Urine: small blood, 8 RBCs/HPF Retic count 10.2 10e9/L, Ret % 1.0 % L Haptoglobin <8 LDH 9496 DAT negative Transferrin sat 45 %, ferritin 264 ng/mL Vitamin B12 223, folate 7.6 Case #3 4 units FFP infused plus prednisone 1 mg/kg started Next AM Labs WBC 3.3, Hgb 6.0 (decreased), Plts 75 (decreased) Smear with Multiple fragmented red blood cells; LDH 6976 (decreased), ALT 72 AST 234 (decreased) Transfusion medicine consulted for plasma exchange. After 5 Days of Plasmapheresis Lab trends during plasmapheresis LDH 6976-->4805-->3400--> 2653-->1,145 Plt: 75-->62-->48-->54-->59-->48-->47-->56 ADAMTS13 activity: 80% (ref> = 67)* Plasmapheresis was discontinued *Collected after initial FFP had been infused 8 Days After Started Therapy Blood counts at discharge Hgb 8.2 HCT 23.5 WBC 8.4 MCV 97.1 PLT 96 LDH 658 Discharged to home Discharged on prednisone 60 mg daily Following discharge additional lab data returned Methylmalonic acid 39,423 Outpatient Follow-up One Month Later One month later Tapering steroids Labs: WBC 9.9, Hgb 14.6 ,Plt 238, MCV 91.4, Total bili 1.6, Direct bili 0.3, AST 15, ALT 16, LDH 339, haptoglobin <8 Three months later Off steroid. Labs: WBC 4.2, Hgb 10.6, platelets 160, MCV 92.9, Total bili 1.9, Direct bili 0.4 AST 91, ALT 44, LDH 1815 Haptoglobin <8. No schistocytes on smear. Readmitted One Month Later • Admission laboratories: – WBC 2.6 Hgb 5.7 HCT 15.9 MCV 104.2 PLT 109 • Smear showed fragmented RBCs – LDH 10,766 – Haptoglobin <8 – DAT IgG: Positive • Additional labs ordered including: – – – – – – – – Vitamin B12 99 Methylmalonic acid 6038 Homocysteine (03/24/12): 44.9 Anti-intrinsic factor Ab (03/24/12): positive Anti-cardiolipin antibodies (03/24/12): negative for IgG and IgM Lupus anticoagulant (03/24/12): negative B2-glycoprotein 1 antibodies (03/24/12) negative for IgA, IgG, and IgM vWF protease activity (03/24/12): 99% Pernicious Anemia • 10% of the patients had life threatening hematological manifestations: – symptomatic pancytopenia (5%) – "pseudo" thrombotic microangiopathy(2.5%) – hemolytic anemia (1.5%) Hemolysis and B12 Deficiency • Maturation arrest of nucleated precursors results in intramedullary hemolysis • A positive direct Coombs test is a common finding in untreated pernicious anemia. Vitamin B12: Role in DNA synthesis and Cell Division Hemolysis and Homocysteine • Homocysteine decreases cellular production of glutathione peroxidase-1, an antioxidant enzyme leads to hemoglobin precipitates within the RBC*** • Homocysteine can cause endothelial dysfunction via oxidative injury to the membrane lipid and protein components ***J Biol Chem. 2005 Apr 22;280(16):15518-25. Epub 2005 Feb 25. Homocysteine down-regulates cellular glutathione peroxidase (GPx1) by decreasing translation. Schistocytes • Microangipathic Hemolytic Anemias – Disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC) – Thrombotic thrombocytopenic pupura (TTP) – Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) • (classic and atypical) – – – – – – – – – – MAHA, NOS (not otherwise specified) HIV infection Vasculitis (i.e. SLE) Antiphospholipid Syndrome Scleroderma crisis Malignant hypertension Eclampsia and HELLP Transplantation Medications B12 and folate deficiency or metabolic disorders • Valvular and Aortic disease hemolysis Diagnostic Considerations • • • • • • • DIC profile (PT/PTT/Fibrinogen/D-Dimer) ADAMTS13 activity and inhibitor Stool culture for STEC or PCR for Stx ANA, LAC, APL Antibodies Pregnancy test and LFT HIV serologies C3, C4, CFH, CHI, CFB, and anti-CFH Antibodies – Genetic mutation analysis CFH, CHI, CFB, C3, MCP • MCP expression on leukocytes • DGKE mutations in pediatric cases • Cobalamin metabolism – Homocysteine, methionine, urine MMA, and MMACHC mutation analysis in all children – B12, homocysteine, and MMA in selected adults Management Strategies • Does all of this make any difference? • General aspects of management – – – – Avoid platelets unless absolutely necessary Central access (keep in mind long-term needs) Hemodialysis support if necessary Hypertension should be controlled • Treat specific cause as best identified – B12 supplementation for a cobalamin metabolism deficiency or defect • Plasmapheresis? Plasmaphersis: TTP • Plasmapheresis is absolutely beneficial – FFP 10-20 mL/kg if not volume overloaded or HTN – Laboratory testing timing • Why helpful? – Congenital deficiency of ADAMTS13 • Replaces ADAMTS13 – Acquired deficiency of ADAMTS13 • Removes inhibiting antibody • Replaces ADAMTS13 Plasmaphersis: HUS • Plasmapheresis may be beneficial – CFH, CFI, CFB and C3 mutations • Replaces the factor which is missing or mutated – CFH antibodies • Removes the inhibiting antibody • Replaces CFH • But, NOT ALWAYS – MCP and Thrombomodulin • Cellular membrane-bound proteins • Plasmapheresis provides no potential benefit – STX-mediated HUS • Toxin internalized early thus not removed – Drug-induced HUS Plasmapheresis: Other MAHA • Plasmapheresis may help antibody-mediated diseases via immunoglobulin removal – Antiphospholipid syndrome – Lupus vasculitis • Plasmapheresis will not help others – DIC – Cobalamin metabolism disorders – Hypertensive crisis – Valvular or aortic disease Eculizumab: Anti-C5 MoAB www.medscape.com Renal Transplantation • Donor considerations – Source – Donor risks • GVHD prophylaxis • Disease relapse prophylaxis Pathophysiology of MAHA DIC STX HUS Scl Renal Crisis APLS Cobalamin Disorder Endothelial Injury TTP APLS aHUS APLS Activation of Platelets and Coagulation Activation of Complement Pathophysiology of MAHA DIC TTP APLS Cobalamin disorder Systemic Renal (dominant)* aHUS STX HUS *Not exclusive Nomenclature in MAHA • TTP = ADAMTS13 deficiency • Classic HUS = Shiga-like toxin HUS • Atypical HUS = Complement pathway HUS? – Will we in the future further delineate? • aHUS-complement • aHUS-DGKE • Secondary HUS • MAHA, NOS – 10-25% of “TTP” cases – 30% of “HUS” cases The Evolving Landscape of MAHA To be continued…