Abstract

This report describes a patient with thrombocytopenia, microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, proteinuria, and microscopic hematuria that could be transiently improved by the infusion of plasma or various plasma components. An increase in platelet count following the transfusion of normal plasma was predictable and reproducible. In therapeutic trials with commercially available plasma components, factor VIII preparations were effective for inducing an increase in the platelet count and improving hemolytic anemia, but albumin, gamma-globulin, factor IX, and fibronectin preparations were ineffective. Serum from normal donors also relieved the symptoms of this condition in our patient. Partial plasma exchange (1,000 ml/m2 of body surface area) was performed with albumin instead of normal plasma, but there was no significant effect on platelet count or anemia. Large, multimeric von Willebrand factor components of the factor VIII complex (VIII/vWF) were found in the patient's plasma when his platelet count was normal, but their levels were reduced when the platelet count was decreased. The multimers of the patient's plasma were larger than those in normal plasma, but smaller than those in normal platelet lysate. Although the pathogenesis of this disease remains unknown, we conclude that transfusions of normal plasma, serum or factor VIII concentrate provide a factor that causes significant improvement in the thrombocytopenia and hemolytic anemia. Furthermore, large VIII/vWF multimers are possibly directly involved in pathogenesis of this disease.

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