| Literature DB >> 19055804 |
Kathryn Chan1, Eric Behling, David S Strayer, William S Kocher, Scott K Dessain.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis is an immune-mediated syndrome that typically has a rapidly progressive course that can result in pancytopenia, coagulopathy, multi-system organ failure and death. CASEEntities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19055804 PMCID: PMC2613409 DOI: 10.1186/1752-1947-2-367
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Admission laboratory studies
| Test | Change | Value | Reference values |
| Sodium | H | 126 mmol/liter | 135–146 mmol/liter |
| Potassium | 4.3 mmol/liter | 3.5–5.0 mmol/liter | |
| Chloride | L | 94 mmol/liter | 98–109 mmol/liter |
| Bicarbonate | L | 21 mmol/liter | 24–32 mmol/liter |
| BUN | 7.5 mmol/liter | 2.5–7.5 mmol/liter | |
| Creatinine | 62 μmol/liter | 62–124 μmol/liter | |
| Bilirubin, total | H | 46 μmol/liter | 3.4–21 μmol/liter |
| Bilirubin, direct | H | 17 μmol/liter | 0.0–7 μmol/liter |
| AST | H | 78 U/liter | 7–35 U/liter |
| ALT | H | 53 U/liter | 1–30 U/liter |
| Protein, total | L | 39 g/liter | 60–85 g/liter |
| Albumin | L | 29 g/liter | 32–49 g/liter |
| Triglycerides | H | 4.2 mmol/liter | <2.3 mmol/liter |
| LDH | H | 1068 U/liter | 100–200 U/liter |
| Troponin | 0.05 μg/liter | 0.05–0.50 μg/liter | |
| Iron | 8.2 μg/dl | 7.2–27.8 μg/dl | |
| Iron binding capacity | L | 32.8 μg/dl | 44.8–71.6 μg/dl |
| Iron saturation | 25% | 20–55% | |
| Ferritin | H | 20,392 μg/liter | 20–150 μg/liter |
| Haptoglobin | L | <0.6 μmol/liter | 2–16 μmol/liter |
| White blood cell count | L | 2.7 × 109/liter | 4–11 × 109/liter |
| Hemoglobin | L | 73 g/liter | 125–150 g/liter |
| Hematocrit | L | 0.21% | 0.36–0.46 |
| MCV | 86 fl | 80–99 fl | |
| Platelets | L | 15 × 109/liter | 140–400 × 109/liter |
| PT | H | 22.5 s | 11.6–14.8 s |
| INR | H | 1.93 | 0.85–1.15 |
| PTT | H | 51 s | 225–33 s |
| Fibrinogen | L | <0.6 g/liter | 2.0–4.4 g/liter |
| D-dimer | H | 3.43 mg/liter | <0.53 mg/liter |
| Direct antiglobulin test | negative |
H, high value; L, low value; BUN, blood urea nitrogen; INR, international normalized ratio; PT, prothrombin time; PTT partial thromboplastin time; Reference values are institutional standards converted to SI units.
Figure 1Bone marrow. (A) Aspirate smears show many dysplastic erythroid precursors with bizarre nuclear configurations (arrows) as well as (B) rare tumor giant cells (Wright Giemsa, original magnification ×1000). (C) Ill-defined tumor nodules efface the bone marrow architecture within the core biopsy (hematoxylin and eosin, ×100). (D) The tumor nodules contain many irregular mononuclear cells as well as scattered bizarre multinucleated tumor giant cells with hyperchromatic nuclei with coarse chromatin and macronucleoli (hematoxylin and eosin, ×400). (E) Occasional binucleated Reed-Sternberg like tumor cells are present (hematoxylin and eosin, ×1000). Immunohistochemical studies performed on the bone marrow core biopsy are consistent with classical Hodgkin lymphoma. (F) The tumor cells are strongly positive for CD30 expression with membranous and Golgi positivity (×400). (G) Within the bone marrow core biopsy, there is a conspicuous background histiocytosis with prominent hemophagocytosis (hematoxylin and eosin, ×400). Arrows indicate phagocytosed erythroid precursors (e) as well as an ingested band form (b). (H) An immunohistochemical stain for CD68 highlights abundant background histiocytes, many of which contain hematopoietic elements (×400).
Figure 2Spleen at autopsy. (A) Multiple tumor nodules efface the normal splenic architecture (hematoxylin and eosin, ×100). (B) The tumor nodules consist of clusters of numerous bizarre multinucleated tumor giant cells with irregular nuclei and coarse chromatin (hematoxylin and eosin, ×400). (C) Occasional classic Reed-Sternberg like tumor cells with macronucleoli are also present (hematoxylin and eosin, ×1000). (D) An immunostain for CD30 highlights the majority of the tumor giant cells (×100).
Non-malignant syndromes that can cause pancytopenia without HLH
| Parvovirus B-19 |
| Visceral leishmaniasis |
| Aplastic anemia |
| Myelodysplastic syndrome |
| Myelofibrosis |
| Vitamin B12 deficiency |
| Folate deficiency |
| Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria |
| Sarcoidosis |
| Fanconi anemia |
| Gaucher disease |
| Niemann-Pick disease |
| Transfusion-associated graft-versus-host disease |
| Evan's syndrome |
| Autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome |
| Aplastic anemia |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus |
| Alcohol |
| Arsenic |
| Cyanide |
| Quinine |
| Methotrexate |
| Terfinabine |
| Tocainamide |
Parvovirus and visceral leishmaniasis can also cause pancytopenia by inducing HLH. A diversity of infections can cause pancytopenia when associated with HLH. These are reviewed in Ref. 4 and at .