| Literature DB >> 28133771 |
Maximilien Grall1,2, Elie Azoulay2,3, Lionel Galicier2,4, François Provôt2,5, Alain Wynckel2,6, Pascale Poullin2,7, Steven Grange2,8, Jean-Michel Halimi2,9, Alexandre Lautrette2,10, Yahsou Delmas2,11, Claire Presne2,12, Mohamed Hamidou2,13, Stéphane Girault2,14, Frédéric Pène2,15, Pierre Perez2,16, Tarik Kanouni2,17, Amélie Seguin2,18, Christiane Mousson2,19, Dominique Chauveau2,20, Mario Ojeda-Uribe2,21, Virginie Barbay2,22, Agnès Veyradier2,23, Paul Coppo2,24, Ygal Benhamou1,2.
Abstract
Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) has a devastating prognosis without adapted management. Sources of misdiagnosis need to be identified to avoid delayed treatment. We studied 84 patients with a final diagnosis of severe (<10%) acquired ADAMTS13 deficiency-associated TTP from our National database that included 423 patients, who had an initial misdiagnosis (20% of all TTP). Main diagnostic errors were attributed to autoimmune thrombocytopenia, associated (51%) or not (37%) with autoimmune hemolytic anemia. At admission, misdiagnosed patients were more frequently females (P = .034) with a history of autoimmune disorder (P = .017) and had organ involvement in 67% of cases; they had more frequently antinuclear antibodies (P = .035), a low/undetectable schistocyte count (P = .001), a less profound anemia (P = .008), and a positive direct antiglobulin test (DAT) (P = .008). In multivariate analysis, female gender (P = .022), hemoglobin level (P = .028), a positive DAT (P = .004), and a low schistocytes count on diagnosis (P < .001) were retained as risk factors of misdiagnosis. Platelet count recovery was significantly longer in the misdiagnosed group (P = .041) without consequence on mortality, exacerbation and relapse. However, patients in the misdiagnosed group had a less severe disease than those in the accurately diagnosed group, as evidenced by less organ involvement at TTP diagnosis (P = .006). TTP is frequently misdiagnosed with autoimmune cytopenias. A low schistocyte count and a positive DAT should not systematically rule out TTP, especially when associated with organ failure.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28133771 DOI: 10.1002/ajh.24665
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hematol ISSN: 0361-8609 Impact factor: 10.047