1 / 20

Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura

Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura. Christopher Powe, PhD(c), ACNP. Objectives. Background (TTP, Idiopathic TP) Pathophysiology Frequency/Mortality/Morbidity Etiologies Lab Studies / Imaging Emergency Department Studies. Background. TTP – thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura

kvandiver
Download Presentation

Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura Christopher Powe, PhD(c), ACNP

  2. Objectives • Background (TTP, Idiopathic TP) • Pathophysiology • Frequency/Mortality/Morbidity • Etiologies • Lab Studies / Imaging • Emergency Department Studies

  3. Background • TTP – thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura • Life-threatening multisystem disorder • Considered medical emergency • First described 1924 (Moschcowitz) • Observed 16 y/o female with clinical symptoms • Anemia • Petechiae • Microscopic hematuria • Died of multiorgan failure • Autopsy: disseminated microvascular thrombi prevalent

  4. Background • Symptoms remain hallmark pathologic diagnosis • Positive outcomes if recognized early/medical intervention • 1966 Amorosi/Ultmann developed diagnostic criteria • Outlined pentad of clinical features including: • Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia • Thrombocytopenia • Neurologic abnormalities • Fever • Renal dysfunction

  5. Background • 1977 Bukowski et al • Reported effective cure • Used whole blood exchange transfusion and FFP • Later, Burnes, et al • Used plasma infusion • Survival Rates • 3% prior to 1966 • 82% to date • 1991 Rock et al • Landmark study • Early recognition • Plasma exchange therapy (aggressive) • Reduced mortality rates from 90% to approximately 10-20%

  6. Pathophysiology • Characterized by microangiopathic hemolysis and platelet aggregation/hyaline thrombi • Formation unrelated to coagulation system activity • Definition: microangiopathic hemolysis  subgroup of hemolytic anemia caused by factors in the small blood vessels. Identified by finding of anemia and schistocytes (a red blood cell undergoing fragmentation) on microscopy. • Platelet microthrombi predominate • Form in the microcirculation (e.g. arterioles, capillaries)

  7. Schistocytes

  8. Pathophysiology • Microthrombi form in microcirculation • Partial occlusion of vessels • Organ ischemia • Thrombocytopenia • Erythrocyte fragmentation occur • Thrombi occlude vascular lumina w/overlying proliferative endthelial cells • Endothelia of kidneys, brain, heart, pancreas, spleen, adrenal glands are most vulnerable • No inflammatory changes occur

  9. Mechanism • Von Willebrand factore (VWF) adhesive protein • Mediates thrombus formation vascular injury site • Largest soluble protein found in human plasma • Major pathogenic factor in TTP • Synthesized in endothelieal cells / megakaryocytes • Present in platelets, endothelial cells and subendothelium

  10. Mechanism • In TTP, ultralarge VWF multimers identified • These multimers were the same size as those in endothelial cells • Plasma of normal individuals was smaller • Research suggests a deficiency in an enzyme that reduces large VWF to normal size in plasma of TTP patients • Agitated endothelial cells are main source for ULVWF • Bind to specifici surface platelet receptors • ULVWF entangle platelets adhering to subendothelium

  11. Mechanism • Pathogenesis of TTP is due to platelet clumping in microvasculature • Increased adherence of ULVWF • Lack of functioning proteolytic enzyme to normalize the multimers • Sheer stress of luid and platelet thrombi does not enhance proteolysis of ULVWF • Unknown how the adhesive bond opposes shear stress in the mricroangiopathic causing platelet initiating thrombus formation

  12. Mechanism • Plasma exchange is first-line therapy for TTP since 1991 • Congenital deficiency can replace the deficiency and mutations in the ADAMTS-13 gene by plasma infusion • Acquired deficiency can remove the inhibitor of ADAFTS-13 by plasmapheresis • However, plasma exchange is more effecgte treatment than plasma infusion

  13. Future Research Development • Appears VWF plays vital role in occlusive arterial thrombosis • Development of simpler methods of measuring ADAMTS-13 proteolytic multimers, detecting atuoantiboides are currently being researched for more effective treatment and cures

  14. Frequency • 75 years of data • Uncommon disorder 1 case per 1 million patients • Incident rate is increasing • 10 years ago: 3.7 cases / 1 million • Incident rate is higher today with greater awareness

  15. Mortality/Morbidity • 1980’s: 100% Mortality • Dropped in mortality associated with early dx/trx • Currently: 95% mortality untreated cases • Survival rate: 80-90% early dx/trx • Plasma exchange or plasma infusion • 1/3 patients who survive initial episode experience relapse within 10 years

  16. Mortality/Morbity • Race: no significance • Sex: Women>Men (3:2 ratio) • Age: Most common in adults • Can occur in neonates • Can occur in persons as old as 90 • Peak occurs: 4th decade of life • Mean Age: 35

  17. History • Pentad of findings: • Rarely found with vague complaints • Thrombocytopenia • Schistocytosis • Elevated serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) • Absence of other disease entities that could explain thrombocytopenia and microcytic hemolytic anemia

  18. History • Present with non-specific complaints • Fever (60%) • Fatigue/generalized malaise • Arthralgias • Thrombocytopenia with petichial hemorrhages • Anemia – Hgb <10.0 g/dL • Altered Mental Status • Heart failure • Abdominal pain (? Bowel ischemia)

  19. Causes • Pregancy/Post-partum state account for 10-25% • HIV patients • Often associated with cancer • Drugs • Immunosuppressive agents • Crack cocaine • Ticlopidine • Oral contraceptives • PCN • Rifampin • Toxins  E.Coli, spider and bee venoms

  20. Emergency Treatment • Infuse FFP • Glucocorticoid-steroid and anti-platelet agents • Splenectomy may be performed • Anticonvulsants • Platelet depleted packed red blood cells • Platelet transfusion is contraindicated

More Related