Clinical Review

Immune Thrombocytopenia


 

References

Evans Syndrome

Evans syndrome is defined as the combination of autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) and ITP.80,81 These cytopenias can present simultaneously or sequentially. Patients with Evans syndrome are thought to have a more severe disease process, to be more prone to bleeding, and to be more difficult to treat, but the rarity of this syndrome makes this hard to quantify.

The classic clinical presentation of Evans syndrome is severe anemia and thrombocytopenia. Children with Evans syndrome often have complex immunodeficiencies such as autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome.82,83 In adults, Evans syndrome most often complicates other autoimmune diseases such as lupus. There are increasing reports of Evans syndrome occurring as a complication of T-cell lymphomas. Often the autoimmune disease can predate the lymphoma diagnosis by months or even years.

In theory the diagnostic approach is straightforward by showing a Coombs-positive hemolytic anemia in the setting of a clinical diagnosis of immune thrombocytopenia. The blood smear will show spherocytes and a diminished platelet count. The presence of other abnormal red cell forms should raise the possibility of an alternative diagnosis. It is unclear how vigorously one should search for other underlying diseases. Many patients will already have the diagnosis of an underlying autoimmune disease. The presence of lymphadenopathy should raise concern for lymphoma.

Initial therapy is high-dose steroids (2 mg/kg/day). IVIG should be added if severe thrombocytopenia is present. Patients who cannot be weaned off prednisone or relapse after prednisone should be considered for splenectomy, although these patients are at higher risk of relapsing.80 Increasingly rituximab is being used with success.84,85 For patients who fail splenectomy and rituximab, aggressive immunosuppression should be considered. Increasing data support the benefits of sirolimus, and this should be considered for refractory patients.86 For patients with Evans syndrome due to underlying lymphoma, antineoplastic therapy often results in prompt resolution of the symptoms. Recurrence of the autoimmune cytopenias often heralds relapse.

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