Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia
Warm antibody AIHA: 98.6F/37C or greater
Most common type (75%)
IgG responsible for binding to RBCs
RBCs destroyed in spleen leading to splenomegaly
Can be caused when some drugs, like penicillin or cephalosporins bind directly to RBC membrane creating an RBC-drug complex that antibodies bind to
50% of cases are idiopathic and primary
Secondary causes include infection, medication and chronic disease (particularly autoimmune)
Most cases are transient, lasting less than 3mos
Can be severe and life threatening
Presentation of acute pallor, jaundice, splenomegaly, dark urine (spilling hemoglobin)
Cold antibody AIHA: well below normal body temperature
Cold reacting IgM/IgG cross react with ABO antigens on RBC surface
Occurs in colder peripheral circulation
Intracellular/extracellular lysis
Hemolysis occurs primarily in the liver
Primary disease >50yo
Secondary: children/teens, usually due to Mycoplasma pneumoniae or other infections such as measles, mumps, flu, EBV, adenovirus, varicella, CMV, H.influenzae and syphilis-
Secondary is usually transient (1-3 weeks), self limiting and mild
Avoid cold exposure, PRBCs should always be warmed and washed prior
Rituximab with or without Fludarabine can be effective treatment but high risk of toxicitiy