Title: Therapeutic Pheresis: A Resident
1Therapeutic Pheresis A Residents Guide
- Lloyd Cook, MD
- James Fulcher, MD
2(No Transcript)
3Transfusion Medicine
4Examples of Evil Humors
Waste bag from CAD
Leukoreduction for blast crisis
Platelet reduction
5Apheresis Methods
6Separation Method
- Apheresis Machines are basically centrifuges that
can move a certain part of the blood based on
density. - The assorted tubes and pumps are there to
maintain proper flow into/from the body.
7Ideal Solutes
Ideal doesnt mean risk free
8Ideal Solute Discontinous exchange
9Ideal Solute
10Ideal Solutes- as defined before Examples
11Apheresis Setup for RBC Exchange in S.C. Crisis
12Plasma Exchange with 5 albumin for M.G.
13Apheresis Complications
14Apheresis Complications Procedure Related
15Apheresis Complications Procedure Related
- Central lines
- Problem two 16g steel needles
- Femoral vs. IJ vs. subclavian
- Hemorrhage (placement, anticoagulation)
- Pneumothorax
- Thrombosis and embolism
- Sepsis
16Apheresis Complications Procedure Related
- Chills
- Afferent tubing, efferent tubing, centrifuge RT
- Can use blood warmers
- Anything that can go wrong, will go wrong
- Blankets
- Disease relevance
- Cold-type autoimmune hemolytic anemia
- Cryoglobulinemia
17Apheresis Complications Procedure Related
- Citrate toxicity
- Pathophysiology chelation, hypocalcemia
- Symptoms circumoral paresthesias, tetany
- Treatment
- Slow down the procedure
- Oral calcium carbonate (Tums)
- IV calcium gluconate
- Clear symptoms
- Low ionized Ca2
- Attending approval
18Apheresis Complications Procedure Related
- Other metabolic changes
- Fibrinogen
- Drugs
- IVIG
- Dilantin no problem
- Antimicrobials
- No information for most
19Apheresis Complications Procedure Related
- Plasma exchange with FFP (e.g. TTP)
- Infectious risk reduced but still a
concern - Allergic transfusion reactions
- RBC exchange (e.g. Hgb SS disease)
- Hemolytic transfusion reactions
- Febrile transfusion reactions
- Allergic transfusion reactions
- Transfusion-transmitted diseases
- Etc.
20Final procedural point
- Choice of solute depends on disease treated
- TTP/HUS- FFP-allergy/infection risk worth
replacing vital clotting factors - Guillain Barré- 5 albumin- reduce
infection/allergy risk - Myasthenia Gravis- 5 albumin- reduce
infection/allergy risk
21Indications/ Link to Insurance Website
- TTP- plasma
- Guillain Barré- plasma
- Myasthenia Gravis- plasma
- Leukocytosis- Cytapheresis
- Sickle Cell- Red cell exchange
- Multiple autoimmune neuropathies
- Atena Policy on Apheresis
22Review of the Diseases Commonly Treated by
ApheresisDiscussion will follow in this order
- TTP/HUS
- Guillain-Barre
- Myasthenia Gravis
23Eli Moschcowitz (1879-1964) In hospitals,
people should be treated and not diseases.
- Emigrated from Hungary to America at age 2
- Qualified in Medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital
1903 - Studied Pathology with Ludwig Pick in Berlin
- Brother Alexis Victor was clinical professor of
Surgery - Many contributions to medical knowledge
24Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
An 18 year old girl presented with abrupt onset
of fever, anemia, renal dysfunction, CNS
impairment and cardiac failure. She died 2
weeks later.
Moschcowitz, E. Arch Int Med 1925 3689-93.
25Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpuraDemographics
- Incidence 1100,000 - 1500,000
- Malefemale 12
- Age
- Most common in 30-40 year olds
- 90 of patients less than 60 years old
- No racial differences
- No seasonal difference
26Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura
- Clinical findings
- Fever
- Neurological changes
- Renal impairment
- Laboratory findings
- Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia
- Thrombocytopenia
27Laboratory Findings in TTP
- Thrombocytopenia lt 20,000/µl
- Anemia lt 10g/dl
- Reticulocytosis
- LDH increased
- Indirect/direct bilirubin increased (depends on
liver function) - Haptoglobin deceased
28Schistocytes Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia
29Defining the diagnosis of TTP
- Anemia may not be apparent at diagnosis
- Alternative diagnoses may only be apparent after
treatment has begun - The initial diagnosis should be considered
tentative - Remain vigilant for an alternative diagnosis
- MCG recently had a case of TTP that was most
likely HIT.
30Alternative diagnoses of patients who have
clinically suspected TTP/HUS
- Apparent after the plasma exchange has begun
- Autoimmune disorders
- Systemic lupus erythematosus
- Scleroderma
- Anti-phospholipid antibody syndrome
- Sepsis
- Malignant hypertension
- Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia/thrombosis
- Disseminated malignancy
31Presentations of TTP/HUSThrombotic
microangiopathy
- Idiopathic
- No apparent etiology or associated condition
- Drug-induced
- Allergic Quinine, ticlopidine
- Dose-related Mitomycin, gemcitabine, cyclosporin
- Pregnancy/postpartum
- Diarrhea-associated
- Bone marrow transplantation
- Congenital
32Changing incidence and clinical spectrum of
TTP-HUS
- Methods
- 168 consecutive patients over 10 years (U
Oklahoma) - BMT patients excluded
- Results
- Incidence 4.9/million/year -gt 9.5/million/year
- Associated findings Alternative diagnosis 49
(29) - Idiopathic 70 (42) Autoimmune disease 23
- Drug-induced 19 (11) Sepsis 10
- Pregnancy 18 (11) Malignancy 6
- Bloody diarrhea 12 (7) HIT 4
- Malignant HTN 3
-
HIV 2 -
MOF 1
33Changing incidence and clinicalspectrum of
TTP-HUS
- Conclusions
- The diagnosis of TTP-HUS is increasing
- This may be related to over-diagnosis
- This may be related to more drug-induced cases
34ADAMTS13, VWF, and TTP
- Structure and function of ADAMTS13
- Mutations in congenital TTP
- Pathophysiology of microangiopathy
- Treatment of TTP
35The Von Willebrand Factor Precursor
36Weibel-Palade Bodies
- Storage granules present in endothelial cells.
They are a component of the secretory pathway of
endothelial cells. - Contain Factor VIII, von Willebrand factor,
P-selectin, interleukin-8 and endothelin - The vWF contained in the W-P bodies is the
highly-active large multimer variety - The production, release and processing of the vWF
multimers is critical in TTP and vWF disease
37Weibel-Palade Bodies
0.5 mm
Courtesy of Elizabeth Cramer
38von Willebrand Factor Multimers
120 nm
Adapted from Fowler et al, J Clin Invest
761491-1500, 1985
39VWF Multimers in TTP
Endothelial Cell
Normal Plasma
Active
Remission
Unusually large Multimers
Moake et al, NEJM 3071432, 1982
40VWF and Platelet Adhesion
41Shear and VWF Proteolysis
- Proteolysis increased by
- Shear stress, denaturants
- VWD type 2A mutations
42VWF, ADAMTS13, and TTPFeedback Regulation of
Platelet Adhesion
- VWF Multimer Assembly
- Conserved mechanism
- Prevents multimerization in the ER
- Enables disulfides to form in the Golgi
- Proteolysis by ADAMTS13
- Cleaves VWF Tyr1605-Met1606
- Increase causes VWD (type 2A)
- Decrease causes TTP
Control of VWF multimer size is essential
43VWF, Proteolysis, and Platelet Adhesion
44VWF Cleaving Protease in Plasma
- Discovered in 1996 by Tsai and by Furlan
- Requires Ca2 and Zn2 ions
- Cleaves VWF between Tyr1605 - Met1606
- Activated by shear stress, mild denaturants
Absent in children with congenital TTP
Absent in most adults with idiopathic
TTP (acquired IgG autoantibody inhibitor)
45VWF Cleaving Protease(ADAMTS13)
Chromosome 9q34
Zheng and Chung et al, J Biol Chem 2001
27641059-41063
46VWF Cleaving Protease(ADAMTS13)
Metalloprotease
Thrombospondin 1
Disintegrin
A Disintegrin-like And Metalloprotease with
ThromboSpondin-1 repeats
47VWF Cleaving Protease(ADAMTS13)
Ligand binding?
48Mechanisms of Thrombotic Microangiopathy
ADAMTS13-Dependent (TTP)
- Lesions rich in VWF and platelets, poor in fibrin
- Exacerbated by stress, endothelial injury
- Inherited ADAMTS13 deficiency
- Responds to plasma infusion
- Autoimmune ADAMTS13 deficiency
- Idiopathic - majority
- Drug-associated - ticlopidine, clopidogrel
- Responds to plasma exchange
- May benefit from immunosuppression
49Non-ADAMTS13 Dependent Causes
Factor V Leiden-Dependent (TTP)
V Leiden V Leiden 0 16 4 7 Contro
ls 6 180
TTP and ADAMTS13 TTP and ADAMTS13
P lt 0.001, OR 17 (5.4 - 54)
Raife et al, Blood 2002 99 437-442
50Non- ADAMTS13 dependent causes
Complement Factor H Deficiency (HUS)
- Impaired inactivation of C3b, C4b
- Complement-mediated tissue injury
- Microvascular thrombosis
- Lesions rich in fibrin, poor in VWF and platelets
- Relatively severe renal damage
- Uncertain relationship to ADAMTS13 or VWF
- May respond to plasma infusion
51Non-ADAMTS13 causes
Verotoxin-induced (HUS)
- Lesions rich in fibrin, poor in VWF and platelets
- Relatively severe renal damage
- Epidemic bloody diarrhea (e.g., E. coli O157H7)
- Verotoxin is cytotoxic
- Binds globotriaosylceramide on endothelium
- Inhibits protein synthesis
- No demonstrated role for plasma therapy
52Initial treatment of TTP
- Plasma exchange
- Replace 1-1.5 volume of plasma daily
- Adjunctive therapy
- Glucocorticoids
- Aspirin
- Dipyridamole
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54Response to initial therapy
- Rapid response (1-2 days)
- Non-focal neurologic symptoms
- Moderate response (3-10 days)
- Thrombocytopenia
- Parameters of hemolysis (LDH)
- Slow response (weeks-months)
- Anemia
- Renal insufficiency (unpredictable and often
incomplete)
Treatment requires persistence and patience
55Complications of plasma exchange treatment
Approximate Complication frequency
() Central-venous catheter related
Procedure(Pneumothorax,Hemorrhage) 1-4
Infection 10-15 Thrombosis
(Catheter or venous)
10 Plasma-related Allergic (Urticaria,hypotens
ion, hypoxia) 4 Alkalosis Volume
depletion Transfusion-transmitted infection
lt1 Apheresis-machine related
Unintentional platelet pheresis ?
Rizvi, MA et al. Transfusion 2000 40896-91.
56Follow-up and outcome
- Follow up
- Duration of initial treatment is undefined
- Monitor CBC and LDH
- Outcome
- Relapse rates 29-82
- Chronic renal insufficiency (25)
- Long term neurologic effects (incidence ?)
57Approach to treatmentRelapse or refractory
patients
- Continue/intensify plasma exchange
- Aspirin/dipyridamole/glucocorticoids
- Splenectomy
- Immunosuppressive therapy
- Vincristine
- Other
- Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg)
58TTP and ADAMTS13
- Plasma exchange does not address the underlying
autoimmune disorder - Refractory disease may benefit from
immunosuppression - ADAMTS13 and inhibitor assays may become useful
to guide therapy
59TTP treatment and ADAMTS13
- Plasma exchange does not address the underlying
autoimmune disorder - Refractory disease may benefit from
immunosuppression - ADAMTS13 and inhibitor assays may become useful
to guide therapy
60Next Indication Guillain-Barre(Acute
inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy
AIDP)
- Thought to be a post infectious peripheral
polyneuritis characterized by a rapidly
progressive ascending peripheral nerve
dysfunction leading to paralysis. - Triggering events
- viral infections -lymphoma
- bacterial infections -surgery
- vaccines - trauma
61Polyneuropathy
- ADIP- Acute inflammatory demyelinating
polyneuropathy- Most common in USA - AMAN- Acute motor axonal neuropathy- Developing
countries, Campylobacter jejuni association - AMSAN- Acute motor/sensory axonal neuropathy
- MFS- Miller Fisher variant- ataxia,
opthalmoplegia and areflexia without weakness
62Pathophysiology of AIDP
- Though to be an autoimmune response to antibodies
present from a recent illness. - The autoimmune response acts to breakdown the
myelin sheath which functions to promote rapid
conduction of nerve impulses. Axonal damage may
also occur. The myelin sheath regenerates. The
axons do not. Thus the amount of residual
dysfunction is related to the amount of axonal
damage that occurs.
63Assessment and Diagnosis of AIDP
- Signs and Symptoms
- motor weakness
- paresthesias
- sensory changes
- cranial nerve dysfunction
- Progression Abrupt onset of lower extremity
dysfunction travelling upward. The accent is
bilateral.
64Medical and Nursing Management
- Supportive measures as the disease runs its
course and the myelin sheath regenerates. - Ventilator support
- maintaining, joint, muscle and skin integrity
- nutritional support by enteral feedings
- Plasmapheresis To remove the antibodies.
- Immunoglobulin
- Steroids
65 Next Indication Myasthenia Gravis
- A chronic, progressive, neuromuscular disease
caused by an autoimmune disorder. The body
produces antibodies that destroy the
acetylcholine receptor sites of the neuromuscular
junctions. - Involves only skeletal muscles and frequently
involves the muscles of chewing, swallowing, and
speaking, and the facial and eye muscles.
66Signs and Symptoms of Myasthenia Gravis
- Muscle weakness (frequently of a specific muscle
group). - The weakness is worse after use and is relieved
by rest. - The weakness is usually worse later in the day.
- No sensory loss or pupil changes.
- May have difficulty holding their head up.
67Tensilon Test
- Injection of Tensilon, a fast acting
acetylcholinesterase inhibitor, will reduce
symptoms for about 5-10 minutes in a positive
test. - Atropine should be on hand in case of a
cholinergic reaction - Remember the neurotransmitter of the
neuromuscular junction (Ach) is the major
transmitter of the cholinergic system.
68Electromyography
- Takes advantage of the partial blockade in
myasthenia - Repeated stimulation leads to decremental
response - Testing done on several muscles
69Management of Myasthenia Gravis
- Anticholinesterase medications (acts to increase
the acetylcholine that is available at the
neuromuscular junction. - Mestinon
- Mytelase
- Prostigmine
- Cholinergic medications
- Immunosuppressive therapy given to reduce the
autoimmune response.
70Management of Myasthenia Gravis
- Plasmapheresis
- Patient teaching regarding airway management.
- Potential complications of MG are secondary to
- impaired swallowing
- weak cough
- inability to cough and deep breath
- frequent respiratory infections.
71Myasthenia Crisis vs Cholinergic Crisis
- Myasthenia Crisis onset of sudden muscular
weakness usually the result of increased stress
or under medication - Cholinergic Crisis Same clinical manifestations
as myasthenia crisis. Caused by over medication
of cholinergic meds. - Tensilon test is done to differentiate between
the two.
72Works Cited
- Aetna Insurance Home page.
- Blinder, Morey. An Update on the Treatment and
Pathogenesis of TTP. Hematology.im.wustl.edu - Clinical Diagnosis and Management by Laboratory
Methods. Henry, John. 20th Ed - Clinical Laboratory Pearls. Jones, Steven.
- Other online sources cited in text
- UpToDate. Internet Resources. Vol 12 3.
73Any Questions?