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Teaching Cases

Thrombocytopenia – Terry Gernsheimer, MD, and Michele B. Frank, MD
Dr. Gernsheimer: Puget Sound Blood Center and University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA; Dr. Frank: Cascade Cancer Center, Kirkland, WA

Copyright of the American Society of Hematology, 2006. ISSN: 1931-6860.


I. HistoryII. Physical ExamIII. Laboratory DataIV. Pathophysiology
V. Differential DiagnosisVI. Prognosis/Clinical CourseVII. Teaching PointsVIII. Bibliography

VII. TEACHING POINTS

  1. Adult auto-immune thrombocytopenic purpura (AITP) occurs more often in women than men at a ratio of 2-3:1. In older age groups there may not be gender differences. The presenting signs may include mucosal bleeding, a petechial rash, or a low platelet count incidentally noted on a routine CBC.
  2. AITP may occur as a separate entity (ITP) or in association with a medication, virus, autoimmune syndrome or a lymphoid malignancy. Childhood ITP is a similar entity but typically follows a viral illness and resolves spontaneously over weeks to months in 90% of patients.
  3. AITP is characterized by thrombocytopenia with normal or increased megakaryocytes in the bone marrow. In most cases the diagnosis is made clinically.
  4. Prednisone is the first line therapy and raises the platelet count in most cases. Most adult patients will relapse at some point after tapering corticosteroid therapy. IVIg or anti-RhD (in Rh positive patients) is useful for the emergent treatment of severe thrombocytopenia. Patients usually have only brief responses to platelet transfusion and therefore it should only be used for severe life or organ threatening bleeding. Giving IVIg prior to the platelet transfusion may improve the response.
  5. Adult AITP often becomes a chronic disease with a relapsing course. Patients often require additional treatment with steroids or second line therapies such as a splenectomy, rituximab, danazol, azathioprine or cyclophosphamide.

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