Review – Kaplan Pediatrics: Hematology
ANEMIAS OF INADEQUATE PRODUCTION
Physiologic Anemia of Infancy
- Intrauterine hypoxia stimulates erythropoietin → ↑ RBCs (Hb, Hct)
- High FiO2 at birth downregulates erythropoietin
- Progressive drop in Hb over first 2–3 months until tissue oxygen needs are greater than delivery (typically 8–12 weeks in term infants, to Hb of 9–11 g/dL)
- Exaggerated in preterm infants and earlier; nadir at 3–6 weeks to Hb of 7–9 g/dL
- In term infants—no problems, no treatment; preterm infants usually need transfu- sions depending on degree of illness and gestational age
Iron-Deficiency Anemia
An 18-month-old child of Mediterranean origin presents to the physician for routine well-child care. The mother states that the child is a “picky” eater and prefers milk to solids. In fact, the mother states that the patient, who still drinks from a bottle, consumes 64 ounces of cow milk per day. The child appears pale. Hemoglobin (Hb) and hematocrit (Hct) were measured; and the Hb is 6.5 g/dL and the Hct is 20 . The mean corpuscular volume (MCV) is 65 fL.
- Contributing factors/pathophysiology
- More efficient iron absorption in proximal intestine in breast-fed versus cow milk or formula
− Introducing iron-rich foods is effective in prevention.
- Infants with decreased dietary iron typically are anemic at 9–24 months of
- Caused by consumption of large amounts of cow milk and foods not enriched with iron
- Also creates abnormalities in mucosa of gastrointestinal tract → leakage of blood, further decrease in absorption
- Adolescents also susceptible → high requirements during growth spurt, dietary deficiencies, menstruation
- Clinical appearances—pallor most common; also irritability, lethargy, pagophagia, tachycardia, systolic murmurs; long-term with neurodevelopmental effects
- Laboratory findings
- First decrease in bone marrow hemosiderin (iron tissue stores)
- Then decrease in serum ferritin
- Decrease in serum iron and transferrin saturation → increased total iron-bind- ing capacity (TIBC)
- Increased free erythrocyte protoporhyrin (FEP)
- Microcytosis, hypochromia, poikilocytosis
- Decreased MCV, mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH), increase RDW, nucle- ated RBCs, low reticulocytes
- Bone marrow—no stainable iron
- Treatment
− Oral ferrous salts
- Limit milk, increase dietary iron
- Within 72–96 hours—peripheral reticulocytosis and increase in Hb over 4–30 days
- Continue iron for 8 weeks after blood values normalize; repletion of iron in 1–3 months after start of treatment
Lead Poisoning
- Blood lead level (BLL) up to 5 µg/dL is
- Increased risks
- Preschool age
- Low socioeconomic status
− Older housing (before 1960)
- Urban dwellers
- African American
- Recent immigration from countries that use leaded gas and paint
- Clinical presentation
- Behavioral changes (most common: hyperactivity in younger, aggression in older)
- Cognitive/developmental dysfunction, especially long-term (also impaired growth)
- Gastrointestinal—anorexia, pain, vomiting, constipation (starting at 20 µg/dL)
- Central nervous system—related to increased cerebral edema, intracranial pres- sure (ICP [headache, change in mentation, lethargy, seizure, coma → death])
- Gingival lead lines
- Diagnosis
- Screening—targeted blood lead testing at 12 and 24 months in high-risk
- Confirmatory venous sample—gold standard blood lead level
- Indirect assessments—x-rays of long bones (dense lead lines); radiopaque flecks in intestinal tract (recent ingestion)
- Microcytic, hypochromic anemia
- Increased FEP
- Basophilic stippling of RBC
• Treatment—chelation (see Table 19-1)
Table 19-1. Treatment for Lead Poisoning
Lead Level (µg/dL) | Management |
5–14 | Evaluate source, provide education, repeat blood lead level in 3 months |
15–19 | Same plus health department referral, repeat BLL in 2 months |
20–44 | Same plus repeat blood lead level in 1 month |
45–70 | Same plus chelation: single drug, preferably DMSA (succimer, oral) |
³70 | Immediate hospitalization plus two-drug IV treatment:
– EDTA plus dimercaprol |
Definition of abbreviations: DMSA, dimercaptosuccinic acid; EDTA, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid.
CONGENITAL ANEMIAS
Congenital Pure Red-Cell Anemia (Blackfan-Diamond)
A 2-week-old on routine physical examination is noted to have pallor. The birth history was uncomplicated. The patient has been doing well according to the mother.
• Increased RBC programmed cell death → profound anemia by 2–6 months
- Congenital anomalies
- Short stature
- Craniofacial deformities
- Defects of upper extremities; triphalangeal thumbs
- Labs
- Macrocytosis
- Increased HbF
− Increased RBC adenosine deaminase (ADA)
- Very low reticulocyte count
- Increased serum iron
− Marrow with significant decrease in RBC precursors
- Treatment
− Corticosteroids
- Transfusions and deferoxamine
- Splenectomy; mean survival 40 years without stem cell transplant
- Definitive—stem cell transplant from related histocompatible donor
Note
Blackfan-Diamond Triphalangeal thumbs Pure RBC deficiency
Fanconi Absent/hypoplastic thumbs All cell lines depressed
Congenital Pancytopenia
A 2-year-old presents to the physician with aplastic anemia. The patient has microcephaly, microphthalmia, and absent radii and thumbs.
- Most common is Fanconi anemia—spontaneous chromosomal breaks
- Age of onset from infancy to adult
- Physical abnormalities
- Hyperpigmentation and café-au-lait spots
− Absent or hypoplastic thumbs
- Short stature
- Many other organ defects
- Labs
- Decreased RBCs, WBCs, and platelets
- Increased HbF
− Bone-marrow hypoplasia
- Diagnosis—bone-marrow aspiration and cytogenetic studies for chromosome breaks
- Complications—increased risk of leukemia (AML) and other cancers, organ complications, and bone-marrow failure consequences (infection, bleeding, severe anemia)
- Treatment
− Corticosteroids and androgens
- Bone marrow transplant definitive
ACQUIRED ANEMIAS
Transient Erythroblastopenia of Childhood (TEC)
- Transient hypoplastic anemia between 6 months–3 years
- Transient immune suppression of erythropoiesis
- Often after nonspecific viral infection (not parvovirus B19)
- Labs—decreased reticulocytes and bone-marrow precursors, normal MCV and HbF
- Recovery generally within 1–2 months
- Medication not helpful; may need one transfusion if symptomatic
Anemia of Chronic Disease and Renal Disease
- Mild decrease in RBC lifespan and relative failure of bone marrow to respond adequately
- Little or no increase in erythropoietin
- Labs
- Hb typically 6–9 g/dL, most normochromic and normocytic (but may be mildly microcytic and hypochromic)
- Reticulocytes normal or slightly decreased for degree of anemia
- Iron low without increase in TIBC
- Ferritin may be normal or slightly
- Marrow with normal cells and normal to decreased RBC precursors
- Treatment—control underlying problem, may need erythropoietin; rarely need transfusions
MEGALOBLASTIC ANEMIAS
Background
- RBCs at every stage are larger than normal; there is an asynchrony between nuclear and cytoplasmic
• Ineffective erythropoiesis
- Almost all are folate or vitamin B12 deficiency from malnutrition; uncommon in United States in children; more likely to be seen in adult
- Macrocytosis; nucleated RBCs; large, hypersegmented neutrophils; low serum folate; iron and vitamin B12 normal to decreased; marked increase in lactate dehy- drogenase; hypercellular bone marrow with megaloblastic changes
Folic Acid Deficiency
- Sources of folic acid—green vegetables, fruits, animal organs
- Peaks at 4–7 months of age—irritability, failure to thrive, chronic diarrhea
- Cause—inadequate intake (pregnancy, goat milk feeding, growth in infancy, chronic hemolysis), decreased absorption or congenital defects of folate metabolism
- Differentiating feature—low serum folate
- Treatment—daily folate; transfuse only if severe and symptomatic
Vitamin B12 (Cobalamin) Deficiency
- Only animal sources; produced by microorganisms (humans cannot synthesize)
- Sufficient stores in older children and adults for 3–5 years; but in infants born to mothers with deficiency, will see signs in first 4–5 months
- Inadequate production (extreme restriction [vegans]), lack of intrinsic factor (con- genital pernicious anemia [rare], autosomal recessive; also juvenile pernicious ane- mia [rare] or gastric surgery), impaired absorption (terminal ileum disease/removal)
- Clinical—weakness, fatigue, failure to thrive, irritability, pallor, glossitis, diarrhea, vomiting, jaundice, many neurologic symptoms
- Labs—normal serum folate and decreased vitamin B12
- Treatment—parenteral B12
Note
Hypersegmented neutrophils have >5 lobes in a peripheral smear.
Note
If autoimmune pernicious anemia is suspected, remember the Schilling test and antiparietal cell antibodies.
Table 19-2. Comparison of Folic Acid Versus Vitamin B12 Deficiencies
Folic Acid Deficiency | Vitamin B12 (Cobalamin) Deficiency | |
Food sources | Green vegetables, fruits, animals | Only from animals, produced by microorganisms |
Presentation | Peaks at 4−7 months | Older children and adults with sufficient stores for 3−5 years
Infants born to mothers: first signs 4−6 months |
Causes | Goat milk feeding Chronic hemolysis Decreased absorption
Congenital defects of folate metabolism |
Inadequate production (vegans)
Congenital or juvenile pernicious anemia (autosomal recessive, rare) Gastric surgery Terminal ileum disease |
Findings | Low serum folate with normal to increased iron and vitamin B12 | Normal serum folate and decreased vitamin B12 |
Treatment | Daily folate | Parenteral vitamin B12 |
HEMOLYTIC ANEMIAS
Hereditary Spherocytosis and Elliptocytosis
- Most autosomal dominant
- Abnormal shape of RBC due to spectrin deficiency → decreased deformability →
early removal of cells by spleen
- Clinical presentation
− Anemia and hyperbilirubinemia in newborn
- Hypersplenism, biliary gallstones
- Susceptible to aplastic crisis (parvovirus B19)
- Labs
- Increased reticulocytes
- Increased bilirubin
- Hb 6–10 mg/dL
- Normal MCV; increased mean cell Hb concentration (MCHC)
− Smear—spherocytes or elliptocytes diagnostic
- Diagnosis
- Blood smear, family history, increased spleen size
- Confirmation—osmotic fragility test
- Treatment—transfusions, splenectomy (after 5–6 years), folate
Enzyme Defects
Pyruvate kinase (glycolytic enzyme)
- Wide range of presentation
- Some degree of pallor, jaundice, and splenomegaly
- Increased reticulocytes, mild macrocytosis, polychromatophilia
- Diagnosis—pyruvate kinase (PK) assay (decreased activity)
- Treatment—exchange transfusion for significant jaundice in neonate; transfusions (rarely needed), splenectomy
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD)
A 2-year-old boy presents to the physician’s office for an ear check. The child had an ear infection that was treated with trimethaprim-sulfamethoxazole 3 weeks earlier. On physical examination, the patient is noted to be extremely pale. Hb and Hct were obtained and are noted to be 7.0 g/dL and 22 , respectively.
- Two syndromes
- Episodic hemolytic anemia (most common)
- Chronic nonspherocytic hemolytic anemia
- X-linked; a number of abnormal alleles
- Episodic common among Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, African, and Asian
ethnic groups; wide range of expression varies among ethnic groups
- Within 24–48 hours after ingestion of an oxidant (acetylsalicylic acid, sulfa drugs, antimalarials, fava beans) or infection and severe illness → rapid drop in Hb, hemoglobinuria and jaundice (if severe)
- Acute drop in Hb, saturated haptoglobin → free Hb and hemoglobinuria, Heinz bodies, increased reticulocytes
- Diagnosis—direct measurement of G6PD activity
- Treatment—prevention (avoid oxidants); supportive for anemia
HEMOGLOBIN DISORDERS
Sickle Cell Anemia (Homozygous Sickle Cell or S-Beta Thalassemia)
A 6-month-old, African-American infant presents to the pediatrician with painful swollen hands and swollen feet.
- Occurs in endemic malarial areas
- Single base pair change (thymine for adenine) at the sixth codon of the beta gene (valine instead of glutamic acid)
Note
Patients without a functioning spleen are predisposed to infection with encapsulated organisms. Pneumococcal vaccines 13 (PCV13) and 23 (PPSV23) are necessary.
- Clinical presentation
- Newborn usually without symptoms; development of hemolytic anemia over first 2–4 months (replacement of HbF); as early as age 6 months; some children have functional asplenia; by age 5, all have functional asplenia
- First presentation usually hand-foot syndrome (acute distal dactylitis)—sym- metric, painful swelling of hands and feet (ischemic necrosis of small bones)
− Acute painful crises:
- Younger—mostly extremities
- With increasing age—head, chest, back, abdomen
- Precipitated by illness, fever, hypoxia, acidosis, or without any factors (older)
- More extensive vaso-occlusive crises → ischemic damage
- Skin ulcers
- Retinopathy
- Avascular necrosis of hip and shoulder
- Infarction of bone and marrow (increased risk of Salmonella osteomyelitis)
° Splenic autoinfarction
- Pulmonary—acute chest syndrome (along with sepsis, are most common causes of mortality)
- Stroke (peak at 6–9 years of age)
- Priapism, especially in adolescence
- Acute splenic sequestration (peak age 6 mos to 3 yrs); can lead to rapid death
- Altered splenic function → increased susceptibility to infection, especially with
encapsulated bacteria (S. pneumococcus, H. influenzae, N. meningitidis)
- Aplastic crisis—after infection with parvovirus B19; absence of reticulocytes during acute anemia
- Cholelithiasis—symptomatic gallstones
- Kidneys—decreased renal function (proteinuria first sign); UTIs, papillary necrosis
- Labs
- Increased reticulocytes
- Mild to moderate anemia
- Normal MCV
- If severe anemia:
} Smear—target cells, poikilocytes, hypochromasia, sickle RBCs, nucleated RBCs, Howell-Jolly bodies (lack of splenic function)
} Bone marrow markedly hyperplastic
- Diagnosis
- Confirm diagnosis with Hb electrophoresis (best test)
- Newborn screen; use Hb electrophoresis
- Prenatal diagnosis for parents with trait
- Treatment—Prevent complications:
- Immunize (pneumococcal regular plus 23-valent, meningococcal)
- Start penicillin prophylaxis at 2 months until age 5
- Educate family (assessing illness, palpating spleen, )
- Folate supplementation
- Aggressive antibiotic treatment of infections
- Pain control
- Transfusions as needed
- Monitor for risk of stroke with transcranial Doppler
− Hydroxyurea
- Bone-marrow transplant in selected patients age <16 years
THALASSEMIAS
©2007 Kaplan Medical. Reproduced with permission from Dr. Philip Silberberg, University of California at San Diego.
Figure 19-1. X-Ray of the Skull Demonstrating “Hair on End” Appearance of Thallasemia
Alpha Thalassemia
- Alpha thalassemia trait: deletion of 2 genes
- Common in African Americans and those of Mediterranean descent
- Mild hypochromic, microcytic anemia (normal RDW) without clinical problems;
- Often diagnosed as iron deficiency anemia; need molecular analysis for diagnosis
- HgB H disease: deletion of 3 genes; Hgb Barts >25% in newborn period and easily diagnosed with electrophoresis
- At least one parent has alpha-thalassemia trait; later beta-tetramers develop (Hgb H—interact with RBC membrane to produce Heinz bodies) and can be identified electrophoretically; microcytosis and hypochromia with mild to mod- erate anemia; target cells present, mild splenomegaly, jaundice and cholelithiasis
- Typically do not require transfusions or splenectomy; common in Southeast Asians
- Alpha-thalassemia major: deletion of 4 genes; severe fetal anemia resulting in hydrops fetalis
- Newborn has predominantly Hgb Barts with small amounts of other fetal Hgb; immediate exchange transfusions are required for any possibility of survival; transfusion-dependent with only chance of cure (bone marrow transplant)
Beta Thalassemia Major (Cooley Anemia)
A 9-year-old has a greenish-brown complexion, maxillary hyperplasia, splenomegaly, and gallstones. Her Hb level is 5.0 g/dL and MCV is 65 mL.
- Excess alpha globin chains → alpha tetramers form; increase in HbF (no problem with gamma-chain production)
- Presents in second month of life with progressive anemia, hypersplenism, and cardiac decompensation (Hb <4 mg/dL)
- Expanded medullary space with increased expansion of face and skull (hair-on- end); extramedullary hematopoiesis, hepatosplenomegaly
- Labs
- Infants born with HbF only (seen on Hgb electrophoresis)
- Severe anemia, low reticulocytes, increased nucleated RBCs, hyperbilirubinemia microcytosis
- Labs
− No normal cells seen on smear
- Bone-marrow hyperplasia; iron accumulates → increased serum ferritin and transferrin saturation
- Treatment
- Transfusions
- Deferoxamine (assess iron overload with liver biopsy)
- May need splenectomy
- Bone-marrow transplant curative
Note
Minor bleeds = von Willebrand Deep bleeds = hemophilia
HEMORRHAGIC DISORDERS
Evaluation of Bleeding Disorders
- History provides the most useful
− von Willebrand disease (vWD) or platelet dysfunction → mucous membrane bleeding, petechiae, small ecchymoses
- Clotting factors—deep bleeding with more extensive ecchymoses and hema- toma
- Laboratory studies
- Obtain platelets, bleeding time, PT, PTT
- If normal, von Willebrand factor (vWF) testing and thrombin time
- If abnormal, further clotting factor workup
- Bleeding time—platelet function and interaction with vessel walls; qualitative platelet defects or vWD (platelet function analyzer)
- Obtain platelets, bleeding time, PT, PTT
- Platelet count—thrombocytopenia is the most common acquired cause of bleeding disorders in children
- PTT—intrinsic pathway: from initiation of clotting at level of factor XII through the final clot (prolonged with factor VIII, IX, XI, XII deficiency)
- PT—measures extrinsic pathway after activation of clotting by thromboplastin in the presence of Ca2+; prolonged by deficiency of factors VII, XIII or antico- agulants; standardized values using the International Normalized Ratio (INR)
- Thrombin time—measures the final step: fibrinogen → fibrin; if prolonged: decreased fibrin or abnormal fibrin or substances that interfere with fibrin polymerization (heparin or fibrin split products)
- Mixing studies
- If there is a prolongation of PT, PTT, or thrombin time, then add normal plasma to the patient’s and repeat labs:
} Correction of lab prolongation suggests deficiency of clotting factor.
} If not or only partially corrected, then it is due to an inhibitor (most common on inpatient basis is heparin).
} If it becomes more prolonged with clinical bleeding, there is an antibody directed against a clotting factor (mostly factors VIII, IX, or XI).
} If there is no clinical bleeding but both the PTT and mixing study are prolonged, consider lupus anticoagulant (predisposition to excessive clotting).
- Clotting factor assays—each can be measured; severe deficiency of factors VIII or IX = <1% of normal; moderate = 1–5%; mild = >5%
- Platelet aggregation studies—if suspect a qualitative platelet dysfunction, ristocetin
Table 19-3. Clinical Findings in Coagulopathies
Factor VIII | Factor IX | vWF | |
Platelet | Normal | Normal | Normal |
PT | Normal | Normal | Normal |
PTT | ↑ | ↑ | ↑ |
Bleeding time | Normal | Normal | ↑ |
Factor VIII | ↓ | Normal | Normal |
Factor IX | Normal | ↓ | Normal |
vWF | Normal | Normal | ↓ |
Sex | Male | Male | Male/female |
Treatment | Factor VIII, DDAVP | Factor IX | Fresh frozen plasma, cryotherapy, DDAVP |
Definition of abbreviations: DDAVP, Desmopressin; PT, prothrombin time; PTT, partial thromboplastin time; vWF, von Willebrand factor.
Note
There is no way to clinically differentiate factors VIII and IX deficiencies. You must get specific factor levels.
Hemophilia A (VIII) and B (IX)
- 85% are A and 15% B; no racial or ethnic predisposition
• X-linked
- Clot formation is delayed and not robust → slowing of rate of clot formation
- With crawling and walking—easy bruising
- Hallmark is hemarthroses—earliest in ankles; in older child, knees and elbows
- Large-volume blood loss into iliopsoas muscle (inability to extend hip)—vague groin pain and hypovolemic shock
- Vital structure bleeding—life-threatening
- Labs
- 2× to 3× increase in PTT (all others normal)
− Correction with mixing studies
- Specific assay confirms:
- Ratio of VIII:vWF sometimes used to diagnose carrier state
- Normal platelets, PT, bleeding time, and vW Factor
- Treatment
- Replace specific factor
- Prophylaxis now recommended for young children with severe bleeding (intra- venous via a central line every 2–3 days); prevents chronic joint disease
- For mild bleed—patient’s endogenous factor can be released with desmopressin
(may use intranasal form)
- Avoid antiplatelet and aspirin medications
- DDAVP increases factor VIII levels in mild disease
von Willebrand Disease (vWD)
- Most common hereditary bleeding disorder; autosomal dominant, but more females affected
- Normal situation—vWF adheres to subendothelial matrix, and platelets then adhere to this and become activated; also serves as carrier protein for factor VIII
- Clinical presentation—mucocutaneous bleeding (excessive bruising, epistaxis, menorrhagia, postoperative bleeding)
• Labs—increased bleeding time and PTT
- Quantitative assay for vWFAg, vWF activity (ristocetin cofactor activity), plasma factor VIII, determination of vWF structure and platelet count
- Treatment—need to increase the level of vWF and factor VIII
- Most with type 1 DDAVP induces release of vWF
- For types 2 or 3 need replacement → plasma-derived vWF-containing concen- trates with factor VIII
Other Bleeding Disorders
Vitamin K deficiency
• Newborn needs intramuscular administration of vitamin K or develops bleeding diathesis
- Postnatal deficiency—lack of oral intake, alteration in gut flora (long-term antibi- otic use), malabsorption
- Vitamin K is fat soluble so deficiency associated with a decrease in factors II, VII, IX, and X, and proteins C and S
- Increased PT and PTT with normal platelet count and bleeding time
Liver disease
• All clotting factors produced exclusively in the liver, except for factor VIII
- Decreases proportional to extent of hepatocellular damage
- Treatment—fresh frozen plasma (supplies all clotting factors) and/or cryoprecipi- tate (supplies fibrinogen)
PLATELET DISORDERS
Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP)
A 4-year-old child previously healthy presents with petechiae, purpura, and excessive bleeding after falling from his bicycle.
- Autoantibodies against platelet surface
- Clinical presentation
- Typically 1–4 weeks after a nonspecific viral infection
- Most 1–4 years of age → sudden onset of petechiae and purpura with or with- out mucous membrane bleeding
- Most resolve within 6 months
− <1% with intracranial hemorrhage
- 10–20% develop chronic ITP
- Labs
− Platelets <20,000/mm3
- Platelet size normal to increased
- Other cell lines normal
- Bone marrow—normal to increased megakaryocytes
- Treatment
- Transfusion contraindicated unless life-threatening bleeding (platelet antibod- ies will bind to transfused platelets as well)
- No specific treatment if platelets >20,000 and no ongoing bleeding
- If very low platelets, ongoing bleeding that is difficult to stop or life-threatening:
- Intravenous immunoglobulin for 1–2 days
- If inadequate response, then prednisone
- Splenectomy reserved for older child with severe disease
Note
With ITP, the physical examination is otherwise normal; hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy should suggest another disease.