Summary

This presentation discusses aplastic anemia, a blood disorder characterized by bone marrow failure. It covers causes, including both acquired and inherited factors, as well as potential treatments and the prognosis of the condition. Important aspects like epidemiology, pathophysiology, and clinical features are also included in the presentation.

Full Transcript

# Aplastic Anemia - Dr Rahul Arya - Assistant Professor - Department of Medicine ## Definition Aplastic anemia is pancytopenia with bone marrow hypocellularity. ## Causes ### Acquired 1. Secondary - Radiation - Drugs and chemicals: Benzene, allopurinol, leflunomide, gold, etc - Vi...

# Aplastic Anemia - Dr Rahul Arya - Assistant Professor - Department of Medicine ## Definition Aplastic anemia is pancytopenia with bone marrow hypocellularity. ## Causes ### Acquired 1. Secondary - Radiation - Drugs and chemicals: Benzene, allopurinol, leflunomide, gold, etc - Viruses - Epstein-Barr virus - Hepatitis (non-A, non-B, non-C hepatitis) - Parvovirus B19 - HIV-1 (AIDS) - Immune diseases - Eosinophilic fasciitis - Hyperimmunoglobulinemia - Large granular lymphocytosis (LGL) - Thymoma/thymic carcinoma - Graft-versus-host disease in immunodeficiency - Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) - Pregnancy - Idiopathic ### Inherited - Fanconi anemia - Dyskeratosis congenital - Shwachman-Diamond syndrome - Amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia - Familial aplastic anemias ## Epidemiology - Men and women are affected with equal frequency. - The age distribution is biphasic, with the major peak in the teens and twenties and a second rise in older adults. ## Pathophysiology - Bone marrow failure results from severe damage to the hematopoietic cell compartment. - In aplastic anemia, there is replacement of the bone marrow by fat. - Early hematopoietic cells, committed and primitive progenitor cells, are virtually absent. - An intrinsic stem cell defect exists for the constitutional aplastic anemias. ## Clinical Features - History - Aplastic anemia can appear abruptly or insidiously. - Bleeding is the most common early symptom: easy bruising, oozing from the gums, nosebleeds, heavy menstrual flow, petechiae. - Symptoms of anemia are also frequent, including lassitude, weakness, shortness of breath, and a pounding sensation in the ears. - Patients often feel and look remarkably well despite drastically reduced blood counts. - Prior drug use, chemical exposure, and preceding viral illnesses must often be elicited. ## Physical Examination - Pallor - Petechiae, ecchymoses, retinal hemorrhages. - Lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly are highly atypical of aplastic anemia. ## Laboratory Studies ### Blood - Large erythrocytes and a paucity of platelets and granulocytes. - Mean corpuscular volume (MCV) is commonly increased. - Reticulocytes are absent or few, and lymphocyte numbers may be normal or reduced. ### Bone Marrow - The bone marrow is usually readily aspirated but dilute on smear, and the fatty biopsy specimen may be grossly pale on withdrawal. - In severe aplasia, the smear of the aspirated specimen shows only red cells, residual lymphocytes, and stromal cells. - Biopsy shows mainly fat under the microscope, with hematopoietic cells occupying <25% of the marrow space. ## Treatment ### Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation - This is the best therapy for the younger patient with a fully histocompatible sibling donor. - For allogeneic transplant from fully matched siblings, long-term survival rates for children are approximately 90%. ### Immunosuppression - Antithymocyte globulin (ATG) in combination with cyclosporine. - It induces hematologic recovery in 60-70% of patients. Relapse is frequent. - Horse ATG is administered as intravenous infusions over 4 days. - Methylprednisolone is administered with ATG to ameliorate the immune consequences of heterologous protein infusion. - Cyclosporine is administered orally at an initial high dose, with subsequent adjustment according to blood levels obtained every 2 weeks. ## Supportive Care - Infection in the presence of severe neutropenia must be aggressively treated by prompt institution of parenteral, broad-spectrum antibiotics. - Both platelet and erythrocyte numbers can be maintained by transfusion. - RBCs should be transfused to maintain a normal level of activity, usually at a hemoglobin value of 7 g/dL. - A regimen of 2 units every 2 weeks will replace normal losses in a patient without a functioning bone marrow. - In chronic anemia, the iron chelators, deferoxamine and deferasirox, should be added at approximately the fiftieth transfusion to avoid secondary hemochromatosis. ## Prognosis - The natural history of severe aplastic anemia is rapid deterioration and death. - The major prognostic determinant is the blood count. - Severe disease has been defined by the presence of two of three parameters: - Absolute neutrophil count <500/MI - Platelet count <20,000/μL - Corrected reticulocyte count <1%. ## Thank You

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