| Literature DB >> 34521101 |
María-Eva Mingot-Castellano1,2, Josep Pardos-Gea3, Saturnino Haya4, José-María Bastida-Bermejo5, Dolors Tàssies6, Ana Marco-Rico7, Ramiro Núñez1, Faustino García-Candel8, María-Carmen Fernández-Sanchez de Mora9, Inmaculada Soto10, María-Teresa Álvarez-Román11, Susana Asenjo12, Marina Carrasco13, Rafael Lluch-García14, José-Manuel Martín-Antorán15, Agustín Rodríguez-Alén16, Elena Roselló17, Laura Torres-Miñana18, Shally Marcellini-Antonio19, Ana Moretó-Quinana20, José-Antonio Rodríguez-García21, Reyes Aguinaco-Culebras22, Nieves Alonso-Escobar23, Carlos Cervero-Santiago24, Núria Fernández-Mosteirín25, María-Paz Martínez-Badás26, Montserrat Pérez-Sánchez27, Rocío Pérez-Montes28, Ramón Rodríguez-González29, Marisol Uribe-Barrientos30, Isabel Socorro Caparrós-Miranda31, Miriam Iglesias-Fernández32, Ángela Baena33, Manuel Rodríguez-López34, Ana Sebrango-Sandia35, Irene Vázquez-Fernández36, Pascual Marco7.
Abstract
The Spanish Acquired Hemophilia A (AHA) Registry is intended to update the status of AHA in Spain. One hundred and fifty-four patients were included and retrospectively followed for a median of 12 months. Patients were predominantly male (56.3%), with median age at diagnosis of 74 years. AHA was more frequently idiopathic (44.1%) and autoimmune disorder-associated (31.7%). Thirty-four percent of patients were on antithrombotic therapy at diagnosis. Hemostatic treatment was used in 70% of patients. Recombinant activated factor VII was more frequently infused (60.3% vs 20.6% activated prothrombin complex concentrate). Only 1 patient did not achieve control of hemorrhage. Complete remission (CR) was achieved by 84.2% of cases after immunosuppressive therapy. Steroids alone were less efficient than the other strategies (68.2% vs 87.2%, P = .049), whereas no differences existed among these (steroids/cyclophosphamide, 88.5%, vs steroids/calcineurin inhibitors, 81.2%, vs rituximab-based regimens, 87.5%). Female sex and high inhibitor levels influenced CR negatively. Thirty-six deaths (23.8%) were reported. Main causes of death were infection (15 patients, 9.9%) and hemorrhage (5 patients, 3.3%). All hemorrhage-related and half the infection-related deaths occurred within 2 months of diagnosis. Prior antithrombotic therapy was inversely associated with survival, irrespective of age. Median age of nonsurvivors was significantly higher (79 vs 73 years in survivors). Patients dying of infection were older than the other nonsurvivors (85 vs 78 years). In summary, fatal infection in the first months is common in our series. Antithrombotic therapy is associated with mortality. Particular care should be taken to avoid misdiagnosis.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34521101 PMCID: PMC8679668 DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2021004626
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Adv ISSN: 2473-9529