Abstract
Acquired aplastic anemia (AA) is still the diagnosis of exclusion. The purpose of the research was to identify clinical and laboratory signs that do not correspond to acquired AA allowing to diagnose other diseases accompanied by cytopenia. Materials and methods used: Authors represent the results of diagnostic search in pediatric patients (0 to 18 y/o) with a suspected diagnosis of acquired AA who underwent remote diagnosis in the laboratories of the National Scientific and Practical Center for Pediatric Hematology, Oncology and Immunology named after Dmitry Rogachev (Moscow, Russia) as part of the Register Study in Sep. 1, 2017-May 1, 2022. Results: in retrospective analysis of 523 children records, 104 (20%) patients had other diagnoses. In 29 (27.9%) patients were diagnosed with inherited bone marrow failure syndromes (IBMFS), in 11 (10.6%) with myelodysplastic syndrome, in 11 (10.6%) with deficiency anemia, in 10 (9.6%) with congenital unspecified AA, in 7 (6.7%) with immune cytopenia, in 7 (6.7%) with inborn defects of immunity, in 6 (5.8%) with secondary AA, in 6 (5.8%) with acute leukemia, in 2 (1.9%) with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria and in 15 (14.4%) cases with other unspecified diseases. Fanconi anemia (n=15/29 patients) was the most common disease in the IBMFS group; this group had also included: dyskeratosis congenita (n=9), Schwachman-Diamond syndrome (n=2), amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia (n=2), Diamond-Blackfan anemia in combination with congenital neutropenia (n=1). Conclusion: differential diagnosis of acquired AA can be difficult though it is undoubtedly must-do for successful treatment. Verification of other alternative diseases, including genetically determined syndromes, contributes to the choice of optimal patient management tactics.
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