Abstract

An adult male underwent a bowel transplant for tufting enteropathy, receiving alemtuzumab, tacrolimus, and steroids as immunosuppressants. Five years later, he developed an autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA), anti-IgG positive, with reduced reticulocyte count, leukopenia, and thrombocytopenia with antiplatelet antibodies. After an unsuccessful initial treatment with high dose steroids, reduction in tacrolimus dose, and intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG), a bone marrow biopsy revealed absence of erythroid maturation with precursor hyperplasia. The patient was switched to sirolimus and received four doses of rituximab plus two courses of plasmapheresis, which decreased his transfusion requirements. After a febrile episode one month later, the AIHA relapsed with corresponding decreases in platelet and leukocyte count: cyclosporine A (CsA) was started with a second course of rituximab and IVIG without response, even though repeat bone marrow biopsy did not reveal morphology correlated to an acquired pure red cell aplasia (APRCA). Considering the similarity in his clinical and laboratory findings to APRCA, alemtuzumab was added (three doses over a week) with CsA followed by steroids. The patient was eventually discharged transfusion-independent, with increasing hemoglobin (Hb) levels and normal platelet and leukocyte count. One year later he is still disease-free with functioning graft.

Highlights

  • Autoimmune cytopenias are a rare but severe complication after hematopoietic stem cell and solid organ transplantation and have been described after pediatric intestinal transplantation [1, 2]

  • Multiple therapeutic modalities have been proposed to treat autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) after solid organ transplant and pediatric patients with refractory AIHA may respond to a switch from CNIimmunosuppressant like tacrolimus to an mTOR-inhibitor [11]

  • Five years after the bowel transplant, an adult patient presented a severe and resistant AIHA due to warm IgG antibodies, associated with thrombocytopenia and leucopenia. His persistent severe anemia responded only to fourth-line immunosuppressive treatment represented by a combination of low dose cyclosporine A (CsA) and alemtuzumab

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Autoimmune cytopenias are a rare but severe complication after hematopoietic stem cell and solid organ transplantation and have been described after pediatric intestinal transplantation [1, 2]. Case Reports in Transplantation enteropathy [9], that developed late-onset AIHA associated to pancytopenia His anemia, which was IgG positive and associated with reduced reticulocyte count, leukopenia, and thrombocytopenia with intrabone marrow hemolysis, was resistant to three lines of immunosuppressive therapy. He was eventually treated successfully using a therapeutic approach similar to that required for an acquired pure red cell aplasia [10], a syndrome characterized by severe normochromic, normocytic anaemia associated with reticulocytopenia and absence of erythroblasts in the bone marrow

Case Report
Discussion and Conclusions
Findings
Conflict of Interests
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call