| Literature DB >> 26696796 |
Abstract
Autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) is caused by the increased destruction of red blood cells (RBCs) by anti-RBC autoantibodies with or without complement activation. RBC destruction may occur both by a direct lysis through the sequential activation of the final components of the complement cascade (membrane attack complex), or by antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC). The pathogenic role of autoantibodies depends on their class (the most frequent are IgG and IgM), subclass, thermal amplitude (warm and cold forms),as well as affinity and efficiency in activating complement. Several cytokines and cytotoxic mechanisms (CD8+ T and natural killer cells) are further involved in RBC destruction. Moreover, activated macrophages carrying Fc receptors may recognize and phagocyte erythrocytes opsonized by autoantibodies and complement. Direct complement-mediated lysis takes place mainly in the circulations and liver, whereas ADCC, cytotoxicity, and phagocytosis occur preferentially in the spleen and lymphoid organs. The degree of intravascular hemolysis is 10-fold greater than extravascular one. Finally, the efficacy of the erythroblastic compensatory response can greatly influence the clinical picture of AIHA. The interplay and relative burden of all these pathogenic mechanisms give reason for the great clinical heterogeneity of AIHAs, from fully compensated to rapidly evolving fatal cases.Entities:
Keywords: Autoantibodies; Autoimmune hemolytic anemia; Cytokines
Year: 2015 PMID: 26696796 PMCID: PMC4678320 DOI: 10.1159/000439002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transfus Med Hemother ISSN: 1660-3796 Impact factor: 3.747
Classification of AIHAs
| 1) |
| DAT positive for IgG or IgG+C3d |
| IgG antibody directed mainly against epitopes of the Rh system |
| Idiopathic or secondary to autoimmune, lymphoproliferative, or neoplastic diseases |
| 2a) Cold agglutinin disease (CAD) |
| DAT positive for C3d |
| IgM directed against the I/i system |
| Idiopathic or secondary to infections (acute transitory) or to lymphoproliferative diseases (chronic) |
| 2b) Paroxysmal cold hemoglobinuria (PCH) |
| Donath-Landsteiner test positive |
| Bithermic IgG directed against the erythrocyte P antigen |
| Idiopathic or secondary to syphilis (chronic) or to other infections (acute transitory) |
| 3) |
| DAT positive for IgG and C3d |
| Coexistence of warm IgG autoantibodies and high titer IgM cold agglutinins |
| Idiopathic or secondary to lymphoproliferative or autoimmune diseases |
Fig. 1T-lymphocyte subsets and cytokine interactions in AIHA. Cytokines that were found elevated are highlighted in yellow: IL-2 and IL-12, that induce the differentiation of CD4+ naïve T cells into Th1 subset, and IL-4, that promotes Th2 switch. Elevated levels of TGF-β favor the differentiation of Th17 subset, which amplifies the pro-inflammatory and autoimmune response. On the contrary, decreased levels of both IFN-γ and Tregs were found (highlighted in green). The former resulted in decreased inhibition of Th2 response, i.e. an amplification of the autoantibody-mediated autoimmune disease, and the latter may cause a lack of down-regulation of inflammatory and autoimmune pathways.
Main immunological abnormalities involved in AIHA pathogenesis
| Pathogenic mechanism | |
|---|---|
| Autoantibodies | |
| IgG (all subclasses) | antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) |
| IgG1 and IgG3 | complement activation |
| IgM | strong complement activation |
| Complement system | membrane attack complex (MAC) |
| phagocytosis of C3b-opsonized erythrocytes | |
| Cellular immunity | increased cytotoxicity of natural killer cells |
| activated autoreactive CD4+ T helper 1 | |
| increased number of Th17 cells | |
| reduced peripheral CD4+ T-reg | |
| Immunoregulatory cytokines | high serum levels of IL-1α, IL-2/IL-2R, IL-6, IL-21 |
| increased production in culture of T helper 1 cytokine IL-2 and IL-12 | |
| reduced production of IFN-γ in culture | |
| high levels of T helper 2 cytokines IL-4 and IL-13 in culture | |
| increased production in culture of IL-6 and IL-10 | |
| elevated levels of IL-17 in culture | |
| increased production in culture of TGF-β in active patients | |