| Literature DB >> 32269436 |
Somanath Padhi1, Gayatri Behera1, Sandeep Abhijit Pattnaik1, Prabodh Kumar Das2, Amit Kumar Adhya1, Susama Patra1.
Abstract
Acquired pure red cell aplasia (PRCA) following use of recombinant erythropoietin (rEPO) is distinctly rare and sporadically reported in the literature. We discuss a case of PRCA following the usage of rEPO (darbepoetin-α) during the management of anemia of chronic kidney disease in an elderly male subject with review of literature and a brief insight into proposed pathophysiologic mechanism, diagnosis, and management. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Anti-EPO antibody; erythropoiesis; erythropoietic stimulating agents
Year: 2019 PMID: 32269436 PMCID: PMC7132853 DOI: 10.4103/ijn.IJN_129_19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Nephrol ISSN: 0971-4065
Figure 1(a and b) Hematoxylin–eosin-stained bone marrow trephine biopsy section from the case demonstrating normocellular marrow with morphologically normal maturing myeloid elements and megakaryocytes with near-total absence of erythroid islands (maturation arrest). (c) Note there is marked reduction in erythroid islands as highlighted by lack/absence of glycophorin staining by immunohistochemistry (peroxidase–antiperoxidase). Note the background RBCs in the section which serve as positive internal control for glycophorin (original magnification: a, ×200; b and c, ×400)
Figure 2Sequence of events in the present case
Recombinant erythropoietin-associated pure red cell aplasia: cases reported from India#
| Authors, year, place | Age, gender | Indication | rEPO used | Route of admin., duration | Anti-EPO antibody, method | Serum EPO (ref. 10-30 mU/mL) | Management | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bahadur | 22 years, male | CKD on HD | ND | SC, 3 months | 23% (ref. <4.7%), RIPA | Not tested | Cyclosporin + Pn; plasmapheresis, PRCT; renal transplantation | Stable disease, no rechallenge |
| Srinivas | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND |
| Keithi-Reddy | 57 years, female | CKD (CIN on HD) | Wepox (follow-on epoetin-α) | SC, 5 months | Positive, RIPA | 558 | Azathioprine + PRCT; renal transplantation | Recovery, 6 months post transplantation, no rechallenge |
| Ram | 53 years, male | CKD (HTN) on PD | Eprex | SC, 6 months | Positive, RIPA | Not tested | Pn+cyclosporine × 4 years (2002-2006); rechallenge with darbopoetin-α (2011) after anti-EPO antibody negativity | Recovery and stable disease |
| Mahajan | 68 years, male | CKD (HTN) on HD | Eprex | IV followed by SC, 6 months | Positive, RIPA | 34.6 | Cyclophsphamide + Pn + PRCT; followed by rituximab | Recovery, 6 months post rituximab, no rechallenge. |
| Present case, 2018, Bhubaneswar | 76 years, male | CKD (T2DM + HTN) | Cresp (Darbopoetin-α) | SC, 2 months | Not tested | 53.20 | Az + dapsone; followed by methyl prednisolone + PRCT | Stable disease, no rechallenge, 8 months post withdrawal of rEPO |
CKD: Chronic kidney disease; ND: Not described; HD: Hemodialysis; CIN: Chronic interstitial nephritis; HTN: Systemic hypertension; PD: Peritoneal dialysis; CKD: Chronic kidney disease; T2DM: Type 2 diabetes mellitus; rEPO: Recombinant erythropoietin; SC: Subcutaneous; IV: Intravenous; RIPA: Radioimmunoprecipitation assay; Pn: Prednisolone; Az: Azathioprine; PRCT: Packed red cell transfusion. #Another case occurred in an elderly female patient with CKD who was receiving Eprex, but succumbed to CKD-related complications (data not published)