Title: Cryoglobulinemia
1Cryoglobulinemia
- RHEUMATOLOGY ROTATION
- PGY4
- Hamid Mojab
2Case Presentation - Ms. P
- 36 year-old female, writer
- PMHx IVDU, ex-smoker
- No meds, no allergies
- Malaise, fever, arthralgias x 1 week
- Prescribed Ciprofloxacin, no change
- 3 day hx of chills, sore left wrist, rash
3Ms. P Physical Exam
- Looks unwell Diaphoretic
- BP 140/80 HR 96 RR 18 O2 sat 98 Temp 38.5C
- HN anterior cervical lymphadenopathy, ? ulcers
- Resp clear BS bilaterally
- CVS JVP flat, N S1S2, ? murmur/rub, ? edema
- Abdo soft, non-tender, ? HSM
- Derm raised violaceous lesions lower legs
- MSK active joints (left wrist, right ankle)
- Neuro grossly normal, ? asterixis
4Ms. P Evaluation
- Hb 105 WBC 12.2 Plt 170, normal coags
- ESR 78, AST 123 ALT 139 ALP 108 Bili 20
- Na 140 K 3.7 HCO3 22 Cl 103
- Cr 170 Urea 15
- Urinalysis protein 1, blood 2
- Microscopy many RBCs, heme granular casts,
- RBC casts
- Joint aspirate cell count 25,000 with 78 PMN,
gram stain negative, culture pending - EKG and CXR normal
5Ms. P Evaluation
- Admitted, IV fluids started
- Derm/Rheum/Nephro/ID consult!
- Skin biopsy taken
- No Abx started
- Blood/Urine/Throat/Rectal CS, Hepatitis
serology, HIV, RF, ANA, ANCA, C3/C4,
cryoglobulins sent
6Ms. P Evaluation
- Skin biopsy leukocytoclastic picture
- ANA positive 180 homogenous
- RF positive 1 1280
- C3 normal ? C4
- ANCA negative
- Cultures negative
- 24 hour urine 1.4g protein
- Hep B sAg negative, Hep sAb positive
- Hep C Ab positive
- Abdo U/S small nodular liver with no focal
lesions, N sized kidneys, borderline spleen,
normal flows
7Cryoglobulins
- Described by Wintrobe and Buell in 1933
- Immunoglobulins (Ig) that precipitate in cold
(lt37C), dissolve on rewarming - Classification based on composition of Ig
8Brouet Classification
- Type I (5-25) monoclonal Ig (IgA, IgM, IgG)
- Type II (40-60) essential mixed contains both
a polyclonal IgG monoclonal IgM Rheumatoid
Factor - Type III (40-50) mixed, but both IgG and RF IgM
are polyclonal
9Brouet Classification
10Pathophysiology
- Mediated by deposition of Ag-Ab complexes in
small sized arteries
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12Pathophysiology
13Clinical Presentation- Type I
- May be asymptomatic
- Classically produces signs related to
hyperviscosity ? thrombosis - Raynauds
- Digital ischemia? gangrene
- Livedo reticularis
- Purpura
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16Clinical Presentation-Type II/III
- Constitutional cutaneous symptoms purpura,
arthralgias, myalgias ? Meltzers Triad - Cutaneous
- MSK
- Pulmonary
- Neurologic
- Hematologic
- Renal
17Clinical Presentation-Cutaneous
- Develop in nearly all patients
- May precede extracutaneous manifestations by
decades - Purpura of lower extremities
- Ulcers
- Raynauds
- Livedo reticularis
- Acrocyanosis
- Post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation
18Clinical Presentation-MSK
- Myalgias
- Arthralgias (MCP, PIP, knees, ankles)
- Arthritis or myositis rare
19Clinical Presentation-Neuro
- Mononeuritis multiplex
- Cranial nerve palsy
20Clinical Presentation-Pulmonary
- Dyspnea
- Cough
- Pleuritis
- BOOP, pulmonary hemorrhage, pulmonary vasculitis
rare
21Clinical Presentation-Heme
- Anemia (normochromic, normocytic)
- Factitious thrombocytosis, leukocytosis
- Underlying malignancy (e.g., lymphoma)
22Clinical Presentation-Renal
- Present in 20 at time of dx
- Type II 35-60
- Type III 12-20
- Variable presentation
- HTN
- Proteinuria
- Hematuria
- ?Cr
- ESRD
23Renal Histology
- Classically in Type I Membranoproliferative GN
- Focal and mesangioproliferative GN
- Membranous GN
- Thrombotic microangiopathy
24Renal Histology- MPGN
- Thickening of BM
- Cellular proliferation (esp. macrophages)
- Intraluminal thrombi (precipitated CG)
- Diffuse IgM deposition
- Subendothelial deposits fingerprints
25Cryoglobulin Thrombi
26Fingerprint Pattern
27Diagnosis
- History
- Physical exam
- Hypocomplementemia
- Circulating cryoglobulins
28Diagnosis
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30Disease Severity
- Severe disease manifested by
- progressive renal failure
- distal necroses requiring amputation
- advanced neuropathy
31Treatment
- Treat underlying cause (Type I)
- Start treatment in any symptomatic disease
- Corticosteroids
- Plasmapheresis
- Cytotoxic agents (cyclophosphamide)
- Anti-virals (IFN ? Ribavirin)
- Rituximab in refractory case
32Treatment of Renal Disease
33Indications For Aggressive Therapy In Idiopathic
Mixed Cryoglobulinemia
- progressive renal failure
- distal necroses requiring amputation
- advanced neuropathy
34Aggressive Therapy In Idiopathic Mixed
Cryoglobulinemia
- plasmapheresis (to remove the circulation
cryoglobulins) - steroids (1000 mg of intravenous
methylprednisolone daily times three, followed by
conventional oral prednisone) and
cyclophosphamide to prevent new antibody
formation
35Treatment
- Optimal method for assessing the efficacy of
plasmapheresis is - uncertain
- reasonable prescription - exchange one plasma
volume three times weekly for two to three weeks - Limited evidence suggesting that combination
therapy is beneficial in patients with HCV - Induced cryoglobulinemia i.e., ribavirin and
interferon-alfa therapy (Six months) - HCV induced cryoglobulinemia refractory to
interferon alfa alone
36Treatment
- Ribavirin
- contraindicated in renal insufficiency.
- In one study
- two patients with moderate renal insufficiency
(serum creatinine 159 and 195 µmol/L - successfully treated with aproportionate
reduction in the ribavirin dose - optimal dose and duration of interferon
uncertain
37Treatment
- Rituximab
- Is anti-CD20 chimeric monoclonal antibody
rituximab, which depletes B cells, appears
promising - as investigational treatment
- is indicated for refractory treatment
- partially controlled by previously recommended
treatment - given once per week for four weeks
- effectively treated skin manifestations
- peripheral neuropathy
- low-grade B cell lymphoma, and/or arthralgias
- 15 patients with resistant or difficult to manage
disease
38Cryoglobulinemia-Prognosis
- Mean survival 70 at 10 years after onset of
symptoms, 50-70 at 10 years after diagnosis - Death typically from infection and CVD
- Complications (renal failure) predict poorer
outcomes
39ESRD-Prognosis
- Survival on dialysis similar to patients with
other causes of ESRD - Renal transplant can be successful
- Significant disease can recur in 50-70 even if
in remission at time of transplant
40Back to the Case.
- Skin biopsy leukocytoclastic picture
- ANA positive 180 homogenous
- RF positive 1 1280
- C3 normal ? C4
- ANCA negative
- Cultures negative
- 24 hour urine 1.4g protein
- Hep B sAg negative, Hep sAb positive
- Hep C Ab positive
- Abdo U/S small nodular liver with no focal
lesions, N sized kidneys, borderline spleen,
normal flows
41Back to the Case.
- Cryoglobulins cyrocrit of 8 with mixed IgG and
polyclonal IgM - Treated initially with plasmapheresis and
steroids - Later switched to IFN-? ribavirin once ARF
resolved
42Red Flag
- be alert for symptoms suggestive of
cryoglobulinemia - purpuric rash
- arthralgias
- Raynaud phenomenon
- in chronic HCV infected patients
- should measure serum cryoglobulins
43Questions?