Retrospective and Prospective Study of Childhood Autoimmune Hemolytic Anemia. a Preliminary Report from the Red Cell Working Group of the Paediatric Hemato-Oncology Italian Associations (AIEOP)

Author:

Ladogana Saverio12,Colombatti Raffaella3,Perrotta Silverio45,Maggio Angela6,Maruzzi Matteo6,Ciliberti Andrea6,Samperi Piera7,Casale Maddalena89,Giordano Paola1011,Del Vecchio Giovanni Carlo12,Perillo Teresa13,Boscarol Gianluca14,Notarangelo Lucia Dora15,Casini Tommaso16,Miano Maurizio17,Fasoli Silvia18,Paola Corti19,Guarina Angela20,Arcioni Francesco21,Sau Antonella22,Giona Fiorina23,Palumbo Giuseppe24,Saracco Paola25,Petrone Angela26,Verzegnassi Federico27,Piccolo Chiara28,Cesaro Simone2930,Russo Giovanna3132

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics, "Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza" Hospital, San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy

2. Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology Oncology (AIEOP) Coagulation Disorders Working Group, San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy

3. Clinic of Pediatric Hematology Oncology, PADOVA, ITA

4. Università della Campiana, Luigi Vanvitelli, Caserta, Italy

5. SECOND UNIVERSITY OF NAPLES, NAPOLI, ITA

6. Ospedale Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza, San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy

7. Pediatric Onco-hematology unit Azienda Policlinico Vittorio Emanuele-University of Catania, catania, Italy

8. Dipartimento della Donna, del Bambino e di Chirurgia Generale Specialistica, Università degli Studi della Campania Luigi Vanvitelli, Napoli, Italy

9. Unità Operativa Semplice Dipartimentale Malattie Rare del Globulo Rosso, Azienda Ospedaliera di Rilievo Nazionale "A. Cardarelli, Napoli, Italy

10. Pediatric Unit, Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Concorziale Policlinico di Bari, Bari, Italy

11. Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology Oncology (AIEOP) Coagulation Disorders Working Group, Bari, Italy

12. Pediatric Unit, Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Consorziale Policlinico di Bari, Bari, Italy

13. Pediatric Unit, Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Consorziale, Policlinico Bari, Bari, Italy

14. Ospedale di Bolzano, Bolzano, Italy

15. Pediatric Onco-hematology, Children Hospital Spedali Civili, Brescia, Italy

16. Centro Talassemie ed Emoglobinopatie, Ospedale "Meyer", Firenze, Italy

17. Hematology Unit, Giannina Gaslini Children Hospital, Genoa, Italy

18. Unità di Pediatria, Mantova, Italy

19. Pediatric Department, Fondazione Monza e Brianza per il Bambino e la sua Mamma, Monza, Monza, Italy

20. Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Unit, A.R.N.A.S. Ospedale Civico Palermo, Palermo, Italy

21. Ospedale Santa Maria della Misericordia, Perugia, Italy

22. Pediatric Onco-hematology Unit, Santo Spirito Hospital Pescara, Pescara, Italy

23. Department of Translational and Precision Medicine - Hematology Division, Sapienza University of Rome, AOU Policlinico Umberto I, Rome, Italy

24. Department of Hematology and Oncology, Ospedale Bambino Gesù, Rome, Italy

25. Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology Oncology (AIEOP) Coagulation Disorders Working Group, Torino, Italy

26. Unità di Pediatria APSS Trento, Trento, Italy

27. Institute for Maternal and Child Health (I.R.C.C.S) Burlo Garofolo, Trieste, Italy

28. Unità di Pediatria Ospedale di Varese, Varese, Italy

29. Department of Pediatric Onco-hematology, University Hospital Verona, Verona, Italy

30. Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology Oncology (AIEOP) Coagulation Disorders Working Group, Verona, Italy

31. Italian Association of Pediatric Hematology Oncology (AIEOP) Coagulation Disorders Working Group, Catania, Italy

32. Pediatric Hematology/Oncology Unit, Azienda Policlinico-Vittorio Emanuele, University of Catania, Catania, Italy

Abstract

Autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) is an uncommon disease of childhood caused by the premature destruction of erythrocytes by autoantibodies. In this rare disease both diagnostic criteria and therapeutic approaches are not well standardized. The Red Cell Working Group of the Pediatric Italian Hematogy and Oncology Association (AIEOP) developed specific recommendations to help Physicians for AIHA management. The document is available on the AIEOP website since November 1st 2013. The Italian Pediatric AIHA Group began an observational, retrospective and prospective study in order to monitor the management of children with AIHA diagnosed from 2010 to 2018, and to assess whether the availability of AIEOP recommendations had an impact on the clinical management of such patients in AIEOP Centers. We collected a national cohort of 159 children with AIHA from 21 AIEOP Centers; 48 patients were diagnosed before November 2013 and 111 patients after that date. Gender was 56% males and 44% females; median age at diagnosis was 47 months, with 11.9% under 12 months of age; 8.2% of children were born prematurely and 3.9% showed congenital malformations. 23.2 % of patients had a familiar history of immunological, hematological or oncological diseases. The median hemoglobin level at diagnosis was 6.1 gr/dL. Table 1 reports the distribution of our cases, according to the different type of autoantibodies. The comparison between the retrospective and prospective study did not reveal significative differences in clinical and biological presentation. The cold IgM forms were mainly post infective (38.4%) or primary forms (53.8%), only one patient had a secondary form due to a primitive immunodeficiency. These patients did not develop other diseases during follow up (median follow up: 28,6 months). The preliminary results of treatment and follow up of the 146 patients with warm antibody AIHA revealed the following: The treatment with conventional dose of steroids (median dose 2 mg/Kg, range 0.7- 3.5 mg/Kg) was started in 94.4% of patients, in 53% of cases on the same day of diagnosis. A high number of children used additional treatment: red blood cell transfusions (51.4%), high dose Prednisolone (59.7%), high dose i.v. Immunoglobulin (49.7%) and Plasma Exchange (1.4%). 9.5% of patients, with poor responsive disease, needed alternative drugs during the first four weeks of therapy. Response criteria were so defined: a complete response was defined as the achievement of an Hb concentration greater than or equal to the lower normal limit for age with no signs of haemolysis, i.e. normal reticulocyte count and bilirubine concentration. A partial response was defined as an increase of Hb >2 g/dL without the Hb concentration reaching a normal value for the patient age and no response as an increase of Hb< 2 g/dL and/or dependence on transfusion. A complete response was reached by 62.5%, 79.3%, 85.1% at 3, 4, 6 weeks respectively. 14.9% of patients had either a partial response or a resistant disease at 6 weeks. IgG/IgG+C3d positivity was a negative prognostic factor, as compared to positivity to C3d only, with the need of a second line treatment (prevalently Mabthera or Mycophenolate Mofetil) in 31.7% vs 0, respectively (p 0.009). Currently 6.1% of the patients were lost to follow up, 1.3% died, 55,8% are in Complete Response without events and 21.9% of the patients are still on treatment . At the last follow up, in the whole "cohort" of warm AIHA, 58% have a Primary form, 15.7% an isolated post infective form and 27.7% a Secondary form (56% Evans Syndrome). The management of the patients diagnosed after November 2013 was mostly in agreement with our recommendations, whose comprehensive therapeutic algorithm is reported in table 2, with prolonged steroid tapering in order to extend the treatment for at least 6 months. The most important difference between the retrospective and prospective study was the duration of first line treatment: 6 months or more, for steroid dependence, in 71.6% of patients in the prospective study versus 52.3% of the retrospective (p 0.031) and, more importantly, the percentage of relapsed patients: 8.3% in the prospective study versus 29.8% of the retrospective (p 0.001), these data need a longer follow up (median follow up: 24 months in the prospective study versus 63 in the retrospective) Disclosures Colombatti: Global Blood Therapeutics: Consultancy; Novartis: Consultancy; AddMedica: Consultancy.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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