Drug-induced and drug-dependent immune thrombocytopenias.

A. Greinacher, P. Eichler, N. Lubenow, Volker Kiefel
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引用次数: 57

Abstract

Thrombocytopenia is a frequent comorbid condition in many in hospital patients. In some patients, drugs are the cause of low platelet counts. While cytotoxic effects of anti-tumor therapy are the most frequent cause, immune mechanisms should also be considered. This review addresses thrombocytopenias in four groups. Heparin-dependent thrombocytopenia (HIT), by far the most frequent drug-induced immune-mediated type of thrombocytopenia, has a unique pathogenesis and clinical consequences. HIT is a clinicopathological syndrome in which antibodies mostly directed against a multimolecular complex of platelet factor 4 and heparin cause paradoxical thromboembolic complications. The mechanisms through which heparin can enhance thrombin generation are discussed and treatment alternatives for affected patients are presented in detail. It is of primary importance to recognize these patients as early as possible and to substitute heparin with a compatible anticoagulatory drug, such as hirudin, danaparoid or argatroban. Patients seem to benefit from therapeutic doses of alternative treatment rather than from low-dose prophylactic doses. With the increasing use of glycoprotein (GP) IIb/IIIa inhibitors in patients with acute coronary syndromes, thrombocytopenias are increasingly recognized as an adverse effect of these drugs. Up to 4% of treated patients are affected. Most important, pseudothrombocytopenia, a laboratory artefact, is as frequent as real drug-induced thrombocytopenia and must be excluded before changes in treatment are considered. The pathogenesis of these thrombocytopenias is still debated; an immune mechanism involving preformed antibodies is likely. However, since these antibodies are also detectable in a high percentage of normal controls and of patients not developing thrombocytopenia, their impact is still unclear. Patients with real thrombocytopenia are at an increased risk of bleeding; treatment consists of cessation of the GP IIb/IIIa inhibitor and platelet transfusions in cases of severe hemorrhage. Classic immune thrombocytopenia can be induced by some drugs, e.g. gold, which trigger anti-platelet antibodies indistinguishable from platelet autoantibodies found in autoimmune thrombocytopenia. Drug-induced and drug-dependent immune thrombocytopenia is induced by antibodies recognizing an epitope on platelet GP formed after binding of a drug to a platelet glycoprotein. Still unresolved is whether antibody binding is the consequence of a conformational change of the antigen, the antibody, or both. These antibodies typically react with monomorphic epitopes on platelet GP, but only in the presence of the drug or a metabolite. Although several platelet GP have been identified as antibody target (GPIb/IX, GPV, GP IIb/IIIa), antibodies in an individual patient are highly specific for a single GP. Clinically, these patients present with very low platelet counts and acute, sometimes severe, hemorrhage. Treatment is restricted to withdrawal of the drug and symptomatic treatment of bleeding.
药物诱导和药物依赖性免疫性血小板减少症。
血小板减少症是许多住院患者的常见合并症。在一些患者中,药物是血小板计数低的原因。虽然抗肿瘤治疗的细胞毒性作用是最常见的原因,但也应考虑免疫机制。本文综述了四组血小板减少症。肝素依赖性血小板减少症(HIT)是迄今为止最常见的药物诱导免疫介导型血小板减少症,具有独特的发病机制和临床后果。HIT是一种临床病理综合征,其中抗体主要针对血小板因子4和肝素的多分子复合物引起矛盾的血栓栓塞并发症。通过肝素可以增强凝血酶的产生机制进行了讨论,并详细介绍了受影响患者的治疗方案。最重要的是尽早识别这些患者,并用相容的抗凝药物替代肝素,如水蛭素、达纳帕肽或阿加曲班。患者似乎受益于治疗剂量的替代治疗,而不是低剂量的预防性治疗。随着糖蛋白(GP) IIb/IIIa抑制剂在急性冠脉综合征患者中的应用越来越多,血小板减少越来越被认为是这些药物的不良反应。多达4%的治疗患者受到影响。最重要的是,假性血小板减少症是一种实验室人工产物,与真正的药物引起的血小板减少症一样频繁,在考虑改变治疗之前必须排除。这些血小板减少症的发病机制仍有争议;可能有一种涉及预先形成抗体的免疫机制。然而,由于这些抗体在正常对照和未发生血小板减少症的患者中也可检测到,因此它们的影响尚不清楚。真正的血小板减少症患者出血风险增加;治疗包括停止GP IIb/IIIa抑制剂和严重出血的血小板输注。经典的免疫性血小板减少症可由一些药物引起,例如金,这些药物可触发抗血小板抗体,与自身免疫性血小板减少症中发现的血小板自身抗体难以区分。药物诱导和药物依赖的免疫性血小板减少症是由识别血小板糖蛋白结合后形成的血小板GP表位的抗体引起的。抗体结合究竟是抗原、抗体或两者构象改变的结果,这一问题仍未得到解决。这些抗体通常与血小板GP上的单态表位反应,但仅在药物或代谢物存在的情况下。虽然已有几种血小板GP被确定为抗体靶点(GPIb/IX, GPV, GP IIb/IIIa),但单个患者的抗体对单个GP具有高度特异性。临床上,这些患者表现为血小板计数极低和急性,有时严重出血。治疗仅限于停药和对症治疗出血。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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