the anaemic patient basics and pitfalls

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The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls Bettie Oberholster 2013

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The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls. Bettie Oberholster 2013. Day to day “Working” definition of anaemia. Hb too low for age and gender at a given altitude . Journey. DESTINATION. STARTING POINT. Effective treatment. Establishing the underlying cause. Presence of an anaemia . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

The anaemic patient

Basics and pitfalls

Bettie Oberholster2013

Page 2: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Day to day “Working” definition of anaemia

Hb too low for age and gender at a given altitude

Page 3: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Journey

STARTING POINT

DESTINATION

Page 4: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Presence of an anaemia

Effective treatment

Establishing the underlying cause

Page 5: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Potential causes

Bone marrowLack of nutritients (iron, vit B12, folate)

Bone marrow suppression by e.g. drugs, virus infections

Bleeding

Hemolysis

↑Plasma volume

Primary BM disorders

BM Infiltration

1. PRODUCTION 2. PERIPHERAL LOSS

↓ Thropic hormones(EPO, thyroid, androgens)

Page 6: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Anaemic Patient

Cause & Effective treatment

Fast and cost-effective

DETOUR: waste time and may be expensive

SHORT CUT: may land up at wrong destination or get lost

Which route ?

Page 7: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Best Route ?

GPS Route Guidance

Page 8: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

GPS: “History and clinical findings”

• Obvious blood loss

• Drug history e.g chemotherapy, ARV’s

• Chronic disease e.g. renal disease, SLE, malignancy

• Organomegaly

• Family history

Page 9: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

GPS: “Reticulocyte count”

Do not use the % count

RPI: RETICULOCYTE PRODUCTION INDEX

Page 10: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

RPI <2.0

RPI ≥2.5

Blood lossResponse to hematinics

Bone marrow production

defectHEMOLYSIS

Red cell indices

Page 11: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Hemolysis

SCREEN: confirm the presence of hemolysis• Raised unconjugated bilirubin• Raised LDH • Decreased haptoglobin • Increased urinary urobilinogen• Haemosiderin in the urine (IV)

You still need to find out WHY the patient is hemolysing

Examination of blood smear is important for clues

Page 12: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Direct coombs

Red cell membrane studies

Micro-angiopathic hemolytic anaemia

DIC, TTP/HUS, PET/HELP

Page 13: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

GPS: “Red cell parameters”

• MCV = mean corpuscular volume (mean size of a red cell)

• MCH = mean corpuscular hemoglobin (mean Hb per red cell)

Page 14: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Normochromic NormocyticMCV and MCH normal

Hypochromic Microcytic

MCV and MCH low

Macrocytic

MCV high

Blood lossChemotherapyHaemolysis (RPI ≥2.5)

Anaemia chronic diseaseBone marrow failureMixed nutrient deficiencies (RDW high)Early iron deficiency

Iron deficiencyAnaemia of Chronic disease

ThalassaemiaHemoglobinopathySideroblastic anaemiaLead poisoning

MegaloblasticVit B12/folate defDrugs e.g MTX, AZT

Non-megaloblastic Liver diseaseAlcoholARV’sHypothyroidismMyelodysplasiaReticulocytosis

Iron studiesRenal functions

Iron studies Vit B12 and RBC folate, TSH, LFT

Page 15: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Important

Iron, vit B12 and red cell folate studies

BEFORE any blood transfusion

Page 16: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

GPS: “Iron studies”

Serum Iron

Transferrin % Transferrin saturation

S-Ferritin

Typical Iron Deficiency

↓ ↑ ↓ ↓

Typical anaemia of Chronic disease

↓ ↓ ↓ Normal to raised

Page 17: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Normal ferritin does not exclude iron deficiency

Ferritin: 30-100 and % sat < 16%

May be iron deficiency in presence of an acute phase

Soluble serum transferrin receptor assay (sTfR)

Page 18: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Not all hypochromic microcytic anaemias are iron deficiencies or anaemia of chronic disease !!

Thalassaemia or hemoglobinopathy(RBC count normal to high)

Hb electrophoresis/abnormal hemoglobin screen (HPLC)Make sure that iron status is normal

DNA testing to exclude alfa thalassaemia, lead levels and possible BM for sideroblastic anaemia

Page 19: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Do not miss underlying Myelodysplastic disorder

Macrocytic anaemia

Normal Vit B12/folateNormal LFTNormal TSHNo drug history

Page 20: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

GPS: “Phone a friend: Local Pathologist”

• Clues blood smear findings

• Advice further investigations

Page 21: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

GPS: “Bone marrow”

Unexplained anaemia with low RPI

FBC: pancytopenia, bicytopenia or abnormal WBC

Abnormal cells on blood smear e.g. blasts, dysplasia Leuco-erythroblastic reaction

Page 22: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

BM not always the best route

Unexplained Iron Deficiency ?

Celiac disease

• Antibodies•Small bowel biopsy•HLA-DQ2 and HLA-DQ8

•PNH

Page 23: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Right destination

Page 24: The anaemic patient Basics and pitfalls

Take home message