Clinical Review

Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia: Treatment of Common Types

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References

Drug-Induced Hemolytic Anemia

AIHA caused by a drug reaction is rare, with a lower incidence than drug-related ITP. The rate of severe drug-related AIHA is estimated at 1:1,000,000, but less severe cases may be missed.1 Most patients will have a positive DAT without signs of hemolysis, but in rare cases patients will have relentless hemolysis resulting in death.

Mechanisms

Multiple mechanisms for drug-induced immune hemolysis have been proposed, including drug-absorption (hapten-induced) and immune complex mechanisms.1,49 The hapten mechanism is most often associated with the use of high-dose penicillin.50 High doses of penicillin or similar drugs such as piperacillin lead to incorporation of the drug into the red cell membrane by binding to proteins. Patients will manifest a positive DAT with IgG antibody but not complement.51 The patient’s plasma will be reactive only with penicillin-coated red cells and not with normal cells. As mentioned, very few patients will have hemolysis, and if they have hemolysis, it will resolve in a few days after discontinuation of the offending drug.52

Binding of a drug-antibody complex to the red cell membrane may cause hemolysis via the immune com-plex mechanism.53 Again, most often the patient will have just a positive DAT, but rarely patients will have life-threatening hemolysis upon exposure or reexposure to the drug. The onset of hemolysis is rapid, with signs of acute illness and intravascular hemolysis. The paradigm drug is quinine, but many other drugs have been implicated. Testing shows a positive Coombs test with anti-complement but not anti-IgG.50 This pattern is due to the effectiveness of the tertiary complex at fixing complement. The patient’s plasma reacts with red cells only when the drug is added.

A form of immune complex hemolysis associated with both disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) and brisk hemolysis has been recognized. Patients who receive certain second- and third-generation cephalosporins (especially cefotetan and ceftriaxone.53,54) have developed this syndrome.50,55-59 The clinical symptoms start 7 to 10 days after the drug is administered; often the patient has only received the antibiotic for surgical prophylaxis. Immune hemolysis with acute hematocrit drop, hypotension, and DIC ensues. The patients are often believed to have sepsis and are often reexposed to the cephalosporin, resulting in worsening of the clinical status. The outcome is often fatal due to massive hemolysis and thrombosis.56,60,62

Finally, 8% to 36% of patients taking methyldopa will develop a positive DAT after 6 months of therapy, with less than 1% showing hemolysis.52,63 The hemolysis in these patients is indistinguishable from warm AIHA, consistent with the notion that methyldopa induces an AIHA. The hemolysis often resolves rapidly after the methyldopa is stopped, but the Coombs test may remain positive for months.63 This type of drug-induced hemolytic anemia has been reported with levodopa, procainamide, and chlorpromazine, but fludarabine is the most common cause currently. This form of AIHA is now being seen with increased use of checkpoint inhibitors.64

Diagnosis

In many patients, the first clue to the presence of drug AIHA is the finding of a positive DAT. Rarely, patients will have severe hemolysis, but in many patients the hemolytic process is mild and may be wrongly assumed to be part of the underlying illness. Finding the offending drug can be a challenge, unless a patient has recently started a new drug; in a hospitalized patient on multiple agents, identifying the problem drug is difficult. Patients recently started on “suspect drugs,” especially the most common agents cefotetan, ceftriaxone, and piperacillin, should have these agents stopped (Table 4).1,49,65 Specialty laboratories such as the Blood Center of Wisconsin or the Los Angeles Red Cross can perform in vitro studies of drug interactions that can confirm the clinical diagnosis of drug-induced AIHA.

Drugs Implicated in Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia

Treatment

Therapy for patients with positive DAT without signs of hemolysis is uncertain. If the drug is essential, then the patient can be observed. If the patient has hemolysis, the drug needs to be stopped and the patient observed for signs of end-organ damage. It is doubtful that steroids or other autoimmune-directed therapy is effective. For patients with the DIC-hemolysis syndrome, there are anecdotal reports that TPE may be helpful.1

Summary

AIHA can range from an abnormal laboratory test (positive DAT and signs of hemolysis) to an acute, life-threatening illness. Treatment is guided by the laboratory work-up and evaluation of the patient’s clinical status. While rituximab is promising for many patients, the lack of robust clinical trials hinders the treatment of patients who fail standard therapies.

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