| Literature DB >> 27350919 |
Daisuke Takabatake1, Kazuyuki Oishi1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (MAHA) is a mechanical hemolytic anemia characterized by the emergence of fragmented red cells in peripheral blood. Here, we report a case of breast cancer associated with cancer-related (CR)-MAHA along with a literature review. CASE DESCRIPTION: The patient was a 54-year-old woman who made an emergency visit to our hospital because of low back pain, shoulder pain, visual impairment, and anemia. She was diagnosed with stage IV, ER-positive, PgR-positive, HER2-negative left breast cancer (invasive lobular carcinoma), with left axillary adenopathy, metastasis to the soft tissue of the orbital region, multiple bone metastases, pleural dissemination, and metastasis to the stomach and para-aortic lymph nodes. Chemotherapy was initiated successfully; tumor marker levels normalized and the visceral metastases almost disappeared. Hormone therapy was administered for maintenance. Two and a half years later, rapid elevation in tumor marker levels and severe anemia were noted, and fragmented red cells and poikilocytes emerged in the peripheral blood. Positron emission tomography-computed tomography and bone scintigraphy revealed multiple bone metastases, but no evidence of visceral metastasis. CR-MAHA associated with multiple bone metastases was diagnosed, and Paclitaxel chemotherapy was initiated with frequent blood transfusions. Her anemia gradually improved, with a decrease in tumor marker levels and the number of blood transfusions. Three months later, tumor marker levels increased again. Because the anemia was also exacerbated, chemotherapy was changed to eribulin. Tumor marker levels temporally decreased, and the anemia tended to improve, but 3 months later, the levels were elevated again and the anemia was exacerbated. A switch to another regimen was planned, but best supportive care was chosen instead because of rapid deterioration of liver function. The patient died a month later. DISCUSSION AND EVALUATION: CR-MAHA is thought to have a different pathologic mechanism from TTP or HUS. Although CR-MAHA is a clinical condition associated with a very poor prognosis, we consider it controllable for long period by rapid introduction of chemotherapy in many cases.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (MAHA); Thorombotic microangiopathy (TMA)
Year: 2016 PMID: 27350919 PMCID: PMC4899403 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-2312-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Fig. 1Fragmented red cell had appeared in the peripheral blood and presented severe hemolytic anemia
Fig. 2Bone scintigraphy was revealed uptake in the spine, ribs, and pelvis, however, there was no clear exacerbation compared to before MAHA onset
Fig. 3Transition of Tumor marker was linked with the treatment effect. EC epirubicin + cyclophosphamide, LET letrozole, PTX paclitaxel
Fig. 4Transition of RBC and Plt counts was linked with the treatment effect. But in course of treatment, RBC transfusions were performed quite frequently. RBC red blood cell, Plt platelet
51 Reported cases of MAHA associated with breast cancer
| Author | Age | Bone marrow metastasis | Intervention | Prognosis (survival time) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pendse et al. ( | 69 | + | None | Soon death | |
| Kok et al. ( | 43 | Bone meta only | Discontinuation of GEM | Recovery | s/o GEM induced MAHA |
| Lechner and Obermeier ( | Average 54 (19–82) | 24/36 | Each cases | 4 months (chemotherapy) | |
| George ( | 52 | + | Plasma exchange | 3 days | Death due to micro thrombi in multiple organs |
| Himmelmann and Schefer ( | 66 | – | None | 10 days | |
| Lockhart ( | Unknown (middle age) | + | Chemotherapy | Survival for more than 1 year | |
| Fontana et al. ( | 69 | + | Chemotherapy | No description of death | |
| Fontana et al. ( | 62 | + | None | 4 days | |
| Fontana et al. ( | 60 | + | None | 1 day | Death due to pulmonary embolism |
| Ataga and Graham ( | 46 | + | None | 7 days | |
| Narita et al. ( | 45 | + | Chemoendcrinetherapy | No description of death | |
| Nordstrom and Strang ( | 58 | + | Chemotherapy | 12 months | |
| Bastecky et al. ( | 28 | + | None | 10 days | Death due to pulmonary embolism |
| Collins et al. ( | 54 | + | Chemotherapy and plasma exchange | No description of death | |
| N Engl J Med Case Record. ( | 53 | Unknown | Plasma exchange | 4 days | Death due to tumor embolism in liver |
| Own case 2015 | 54 | − | Chemotherapy | 13 months |
The literature was extracted from 1984 to 2015
GEM gemcitabine