Aplastic
anemia (AA) is
a disease in which the bone marrow, and the blood
stem cells that
reside there, are damaged. This causes a deficiency of all three blood cell
types (pancytopenia): red blood cells (anemia), white blood cells (leukopenia), and platelets (thrombocytopenia). Aplastic refers to inability of the stem cells
to generate the mature blood cells. It is most prevalent in people in their
teens and twenties, but is also common among the elderly. It can be caused by
exposure to chemicals, drugs, radiation, infection, immune disease, and
heredity; in about half the cases, the cause is unknown. The definitive diagnosis is by bone
marrow biopsy; normal
bone marrow has 30-70% blood stem cells, but in aplastic anemia, these cells
are mostly gone and replaced by fat. First line treatment for aplastic anemia
consists of immunosuppressive
drugs, typically either
anti-lymphocyte
globulin or anti-thymocyte
globulin, combined
with corticosteroids and cyclosporine. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is also used, especially for patients
under 30 years of age with a related, matched marrow donor.
Aplastic
anemia can be caused by exposure to certain chemicals, drugs, radiation,
infection, immune disease, and heredity; in about half the cases, the cause is
unknown. Aplastic anemia is
also sometimes associated with exposure to toxins such as benzene,
or with the use of certain drugs, including chloramphenicol, carbamazepine, felbamate, phenytoin, quinine,
and phenylbutazone.
Many drugs are associated with aplasia mainly according to case reports, but at
a very low probability. As an example, chloramphenicol treatment is followed by
aplasia in less than one in 40,000 treatment courses, and carbamazepine aplasia
is even rarer.
Exposure to ionizing
radiation from radioactive
materials or radiation-producing devices is also associated
with the development of aplastic anemia. Marie Curie,
famous for her pioneering work in the field of radioactivity,
died of aplastic anemia after working unprotected with radioactive materials
for a long period of time; the damaging effects of ionizing radiation were not
then known. Aplastic anemia is
present in up to 2% of patients with acute viral hepatitis.
One known cause is an
autoimmune
disorder in which white blood cells attack the bone marrow.
Short-lived aplastic
anemia can also be a result of parvovirus
infection. In humans, the P antigen
(also known as globoside), one of the many cellular receptors that contribute
to a person's blood type, is the cellular receptor for parvovirus B19 virus
that causes erythema
infectiosum (fifth disease) in children. Because it infects red
blood cells as a result of the affinity for the P antigen, Parvovirus causes
complete cessation of red blood cell production. In most cases, this goes
unnoticed, as red blood cells live on average 120 days, and the drop in
production does not significantly affect the total number of circulating red
blood cells. In people with conditions where the cells die early (such as sickle cell
disease), however, parvovirus infection can lead to severe
anemia.
In some animals,
aplastic anemia may have other causes. For example, in the ferret (Mustela
putorius furo), it is caused by estrogen
toxicity, because female ferrets are induced ovulators,
so mating is required to bring the female out of heat. Intact females, if not
mated, will remain in heat, and after some time the high levels of estrogen
will cause the bone marrow to stop producing red blood cells.
Diagnosis
The condition needs
to be differentiated from pure red cell aplasia. In aplastic anemia, the
patient has pancytopenia (i.e., anemia, neutropenia and thrombocytopenia)
resulting in decrease of all formed elements. In contrast, pure red cell
aplasia is characterized by reduction in red cells only. The diagnosis can only
be confirmed on bone marrow
examination. Before this procedure is undertaken, a patient will
generally have had other blood tests to
find diagnostic clues, including a complete
blood count, renal function
and electrolytes, liver enzymes, thyroid
function tests, vitamin B12
and folic acid
levels.
The following tests
aid in determining differential diagnosis for aplastic anemia:
- Bone marrow aspirate and biopsy: to rule out other causes of pancytopenia (i.e. neoplastic infiltration or significant myelofibrosis).
- History of iatrogenic exposure to cytotoxic chemotherapy: can cause transient bone marrow suppression
- X-rays, computed tomography (CT) scans, or ultrasound imaging tests: enlarged lymph nodes (sign of lymphoma), kidneys and bones in arms and hands (abnormal in Fanconi anemia)
- Chest X-ray: infections
- Liver tests: liver diseases
- Viral studies: viral infections
- Vitamin B12 and folate levels: vitamin deficiency
- Blood tests for paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria
- Test for antibodies: immune competency
Treatment
Treating
immune-mediated aplastic anemia involves suppression of the immune system,
an effect achieved by daily medicine
intake, or, in more severe cases, a bone marrow
transplant, a potential cure. The transplanted bone marrow replaces the failing bone marrow cells with new
ones from a matching donor. The multipotent
stem cells in the bone marrow reconstitute all three blood cell lines, giving
the patient a new immune system, red blood cells, and platelets. However,
besides the risk of graft failure, there is also a risk that the newly created
white blood cells may attack the rest of the body ("graft-versus-host disease"). In young
patients with an HLA
matched sibling donor, bone marrow transplant can be considered as first-line
treatment, patients lacking a matched sibling donor typically pursue
immunosuppression as a first-line treatment, and matched unrelated donor
transplants are considered a second-line therapy.
Medical therapy of
aplastic anemia often includes a course of antithymocyte
globulin (ATG) and several months of treatment with a cyclosporin to
modulate the immune system. Chemotherapy
with agents such as cyclophosphamide
may also be effective but has more toxicity than ATG. Antibody
therapy, such as ATG, targets T-cells, which are believed to attack the bone
marrow. Corticosteroids
are generally ineffective, though they are used to ameliorate serum sickness
caused by ATG. Normally, success is judged by bone marrow biopsy 6 months after
initial treatment with ATG.
One prospective study
involving cyclophosphamide was terminated early due to a high incidence of
mortality, due to severe infections as a result of prolonged neutropenia. In the past, before
the above treatments became available, patients with low leukocyte counts were
often confined to a sterile room or bubble (to reduce risk of infections),
as in the case of Ted DeVita.

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