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Hematology includes the study of etiology, diagnosis, treatment, prognosis, and prevention of blood diseases. The laboratory work that goes into the study of blood is frequently performed by a medical technologist. Hematologists physicians also very frequently do further study in oncology - the medical treatment of cancer.
Topics • Hematopoiesis • Complete blood count (CBC) • Anemia • Polycythemia • Leukopenia • Leukemia and lymphoma • Myeloma • Coagulation • Transfusion
Blood • Suspension of cells in a solute of water, proteins, and electrolytes • Average volume is 5 liters • 70mL per kg body weight • Plasma • Blood from which the cellular components (RBCs, WBCs, platelets) have been removed by centrifuge • Color is yellow • Contains coagulation proteins (clotting factors)
Hematopoiesis • Development of blood cells and other formed elements • Sites vary throughout development • Fetal: yolk sac, liver, spleen • Pediatric: axial and appendicular skeleton • Adult: axial skeleton (sternum and pelvis) • Stem cells • Primitive; self-replicate and differentiate to become increasingly specialized progenitor cells which form mature cells • Process regulated by growth factors (interleukins, erythropoietin, thrombopoietin, G-CSF) • Early lineage division between progenitors for lymphoid and myeloid cells
Complete Blood Count • White blood cells (WBC) • Differential • Neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, basophils, bands • Must specify whether to include when ordering study • Red blood cells (RBC, Hgb, Hct) • Platelets (PLT) • Mean corpuscular volume (MCV) • Red cell distribution width (RDW)
Red Blood Cells • Transport oxygen via hemoglobin from lungs to peripheral tissues and organs • Normal lifespan = 120 days • Reticulocytes • Immature red blood cells • Calculating proportion within circulation assists in determining cause of anemia • Normal is 1-2% • Low suggests decreased production (i.e. nutritional or marrow problem) • High suggests bleeding or premature destruction of red blood cells (i.e. hemolysis)
Red Blood Cells • Peripheral blood smear • Normal
Anemia • Defined by measurement of hemoglobin concentration • Normal – 15 in males ; 14 in females • Patients are “anemic” when hgb is > 2 standard deviations below normal • Determining reticulocyte count and MCV are first steps in determining etiology • Almost 1/3 of the world population is anemic!
Anemia • Manifestations related to duration and severity of anemia • May provide important clues as to etiology • Body has physiologic responses to chronic anemia such that many patients are asymptomatic until hgb < 8 g/dL • Fatigue, pallor, dyspnea, dizziness, dyspnea on exertion, ischemic pain, cognitive abnormalities • Symptoms and signs of acute blood loss (hemorrhage) are related to hypovolemia • Hypotension, tachycardia, palpitations, orthostasis, syncope, shock
Anemia • Mechanisms • Blood loss / hemorrhage • Initial focus in ALL anemic patients • Gastrointestinal tract, menstruation • Hemolysis • Shortened RBC survival time not explained by bleeding • Details later • Decreased production (hypoproliferative) • Nutritional deficiency (iron, B12, and folate) • Systemic illness (CKD, cancer, rheumatologic disease, etc.) • Bone marrow disorders
Microcytic Anemia • Microcytosis – small cells (MCV <80) • Most common type of anemia encountered in primary care • Differential diagnosis • Hemoglobinopathy (inherited) • Iron deficiency • Chronic disease (may also be normocytic) • Inflammation • Lead poisoning • Check iron studies for clarification • Be familiar with interpretation (see next slide)
Microcytic Anemia • Peripheral blood smear • Microcytosis, Hypochromic
Microcytic Anemia RDW is often elevated in iron deficiency anemia ; look for this along with low MCV on CBC report
Macrocytic Anemia • Macrocytosis – large cells (MCV >100) • Differential diagnosis • B12 deficiency • Pernicious anemia • Folate deficiency • ETOH • Medication • Check vitamin B12, RBC folate, fasting homocysteine, and methylmalonic acid (MMA) • HC and MMA are elevated in subclinical B12 and folate deficiency
Hemolytic Anemia • History and physical findings • Review of PMH, FH, and medications • Jaundice is common • Occasional LUQ abdominal discomfort (splenomegaly) • Lab findings • Elevated reticulocyte count • Reflects bone marrow compensating for peripheral RBC destruction • Elevated LDH • Elevated total bilirubin (indirect/unconjugated) • Decreased haptoglobin • Abnormal cells on peripheral blood smear examination
Hemolytic Anemia • Congenital • Membrane defects • Hereditary spherocytosis • Hereditary elliptocytosis • Enzyme defects • G6PD deficiency
Hemolytic Anemia • Congenital, continued • Hemoglobin defects – diagnosed by hemoglobin electrophoresis • Thalassemias • Group of diseases characterized by globin chain (alpha and beta) imbalance
Hemolytic Anemia • Congenital, continued • Sickle cell disease • RBCs become sickle-shaped hemolysis, vascular occlusion • Hgb S gene carried by 8% of African Americans • 1:625 have disease • Genetic counseling available
Hemolytic Anemia • Acquired • Classified according to site of RBC destruction and whether mediated by immune system • Intravascular • Extravascular • Autoimmune • Non-immune • Many causes… be aware of these – • Transfusion of incompatible blood (details later…) • Autoimmune • Warm (IgG-mediated) ; most common • Cold (IgM-mediated) • Prosthetic valves • TTP/HUS • DIC • Cancer • Drugs
Polycythemia / Erythrocytosis • Abnormal elevation of hemoglobin • Rule out “relative” polcythemia caused by contraction of plasma volume, e.g. dehydration • Primary • Polycythemia Vera • RBC production independent of EPO • EPO level is low / positive JAK-2 is diagnostic • Uncommon • May be associated with leukocytosis, thrombocytosis, splenomegaly • Hyperviscosity • Headache, vertigo, visual changes, mental confusion • Risk of transformation into acute leukemia • Refer to hematology • Secondary • RBC production in response to increased EPO production • EPO level is usually high • Very common • Usual etiology is chronic hypoxia (COPD, sleep apnea) • Phlebotomy (250-500 mL) to maintain hct 45-50% ; treat underlying problem!
White Blood Cells • Differential • Neutrophils 45-65% • “Segs” / “Polys” • Lymphocytes 15-40% • Monocytes 2-8% • Eosinophils 0-5% • Basophils 0-3% • Do you remember the physiologic role of each type of WBC?
Leukopenia • Neutropenia is most common cause • Absolute neutrophil count (ANC) < 1.5 x 109 cells/L • Many causes • Benign racial neutropenia common • African Americans and Yemenite Jews may have ANC as low as 1.0 • Viral infections • Epstein-Barr, Hepatitis B, HIV • Drugs * • Careful review of medications ; be suspicious of any medication recently started in patient with acute onset neutropenia • See next slide • Splenomegaly • Autoimmune disorders • SLE (lupus), Rheumatoid Arthritis, etc. • Bone marrow disorders
Leukocytosis • WBC count > 11,000 • Determine which type of WBC is leading to the leukocytosis • Neutrophilia = most common • Infection • Connective tissue disorders • Medications (especially steroids, growth factors) • Cancer (CML and solid tumors) • Myeloproliferative disorders • Cigarette smoking • Stress (physiologic) • Pain, seizure, trauma • Idiopathic
Leukocytosis • Patients with acute bacterial infection often present with neutrophilia and band formation ; i.e. “left shift” • Bands = young neutrophils • Viral infections are usually associated with low WBCs ; leukocytosis may suggest complications • Ex: bacterial pneumonia with underlying influenza infection
Leukocytosis • Lymphocytosis • Viral infections • HBV, HCV, EBV, CMV • Tuberculosis • Pertussis • Drug Reaction • Stress (physiologic) • Trauma, MI, cardiac arrest, sickle crisis • Malignancy • ALL, CLL, lymphoma
Myeloid vs. Lymphoid • Myeloid malignancies • • Acute myeloid leukemia • • Chronic myeloproliferative disorders • Lymphoid malignancies • • B-cell malignancies • • Acute lymphoblastic leukemia, B-cell type • • Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, B-cell types • • Myeloma • • T-cell malignancies • • Acute lymphoblastic leukemia, T-cell type • • Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, T-cell types • • Hodgkin’s disease
Chronic Leukemia • Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) • Translocation between long arms of chromosomes 9 and 22 ; “Philadelphia Chromosome” ; bcr/abl protein
Chronic Leukemia • Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) • Clonal malignancy of B-lymphocytes • Course is usually indolent ; affects older patients, average age at diagnosis is 70 years • Often found incidentally • Fatigue, lymphadenopathy common • Hepatosplenomegaly • Immunodeficiency is major clinical concern • Lymphocytes are defective ; do not make antibodies in response to antigens • Treatment • Observation • Indications for therapy include progressive fatigue, symptomatic lymphadenopathy, anemia, or thrombocytopenia • Rituximab (Rituxan®) and fludarabine +/- cyclophosphamide is initial approach • Gamma globulin (IVIG) used in patients with recurrent or severe bacterial infections • Allogeneic BMT is potentially curative but reserved for select patients • Prognosis improving ; survival is 10-15 years with early disease
Acute Leukemia • Acute Myelogenous Leukemia (AML) • Most common in adults • Usually no apparent cause • Exposure to radiation, benzene, and certain chemotherapy drugs (alkylators) associated with leukemia • Underlying myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) is risk factor • Symptoms and signs • Related to replacement of marrow space by malignant WBCs • Patients often very ill for period of just days or weeks • Skeletal pain • Bleeding • Gingival hyperplasia • Infection • Pancytopenia with circulating blasts is hallmark ; bone marrow biopsy required • Auer rods on peripheral smear are pathognomonic
Acute Leukemia • AML, continued • Management • Immediate referral to hematologist • Patients often hospitalized for therapy • Anthracycline (daunorubicin or idarubicin) plus cytarabine results in CR in 80% of patients < 60 years • Additional high dose chemotherapy following CR leads to cure rate of 35-40% • Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia (ALL) • More often seen in children
Lymphoma • Hodgkin’s disease • Malignancy of B-lymphocytes • Reed-Sternberg cells • Various subtypes ; “nodular sclerosing” is most common
Lymphoma • Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma (NHL) • Heterogeneous group of cancers affecting lymphocytes • Usually classified by histologic grade (low to high) • Follicular lymphoma • Small lymphocytic lymphoma • Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma • Burkitt’s lymphoma • Many others
Myeloma • Malignancy of plasma cells • Abnormal paraproteins are created leading to systemic problems • IgG – 60% • IgM – 20% • Must be able to recognize in primary care setting • “CRAB” – calcium, renal, anemia, bone • Primarily disease of elderly (median age 65 years) • Males > Females • Most common hematologic malignancy among African Americans ; #2 among Caucasians
Myeloma • Osteolytic lesions
Hemostatic Events Tissue Injury • Vasoconstriction • Neural • Platelet-reinforced • Platelet Activation • Adhesion • Aggregation • Coagulation • Blood Clot • Thrombin generation • Fibrin polymerization • Fibrinolysis • Blood Clot Dissolution • Vascular Patency Restored
Categories of Hemostasis (page 572) Secondary Hemostasis Primary Hemostasis • Primary • Vascular System • Endothelia • Sub endothelia/collagen • Platelets • Secondary • Coagulation System • Plasma Proteins • Cells: Platelets • Fibrinolytic System • Plasma proteins • Cells: Platelets, Endothelia Graphic accessed at URL http://www.kup.at/journals/abbildungen/gross/746.html 9/18/08. Graphic accessed at URL http://www.acta-ortho.gr/v55t4_4/Figure1.jpg 9/18/08.
Bleeding Disorders • Coagulation cascade
Causes of Bleeding(1)Thrombocytopenia: Primary: • ITP • Neonatal Isoimmune • TAR Syndrome • Wiskott-Aldrich Syn. Secondary: *Malignancy *Aplastic Anemia *DIC *Sepsis *HUS *Hypersplenism *Autoimmune(SLE)
Causes of Bleeding(2)Coagulopathy: Primary: • vWF Deficiency • Hemophilia • Platelet dysfunction Secondary: • DIC • Anticoagulants • Vit K deficiency • Hepatic Failure • Renal Failure • Maternal Anticonvulsant
Causes of Bleeding(3)Vascular(Non-Hematologic) • Child Abuse • Vasculitis • Ulcer • Varices • Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome • Telangiectasia • Angiodysplasia
Bleeding Disorders • Patterns of bleeding • Primary hemostasis – platelet and vascular function • Secondary hemostasis – clotting factors
Bleeding Disorders • Petechiae in patient with acute ITP ; platelet count = 10,000