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Paroxysmal Nocturnal Haemoglobinuria
Synonyms: PNH, Marchiafava-Micheli syndrome
Haemoglobin is normally contained within the erythrocytes. It is only in haemolysis that it is free in the circulation, filtered by the glomeruli and present in the urine.
It was originally thought that respiratory drive diminished in sleep causing acidosis, activation of complement and haemolysis in this condition. However, 'paroxysmal' is an incorrect description. Haemolysis actually occurs all day, but the more concentrated urine at night makes it appear darker and the haemoglobinuria is more obvious.
There are 3 features of the disease that are most uncommon together and the finding of them all is pathognomonic:
- There is an acquired haemolytic anaemia due to the susceptibility of the erythrocyte membrane to the haemolytic action of complement
- There are thromboses in large vessels, such as hepatic, abdominal, cerebral, and subdermal veins
- There is deficient haematopoiesis that may be mild or severe and cause a pancytopenia with aplastic anaemia
This is an acquired genetic disorder due to a somatic mutation of the X-linked PIG-A gene1 (Xp22.1) in multipotential haematopoietic stem cells.
- It is not familial and sex distribution is equal.
- It is rare, but may be slightly less rare in south-east Asian communities.
The affected stem cell clone passes the gene to all its descendants (rbc, wbc and platelets) producing a haematological mosaic. The proportion of erythrocytes derived from this stem cell determines the severity of the disease.
The disease can present anywhere from early childhood to very late in life.
In childhood and adolescence the features are more orientated towards the aplastic anaemia.
Presentation is usually along the lines of one of the three aspects of the disease.
- Haemolytic anaemia; this is the commonest form of presentation. There is haemoglobinuria that is often mistaken for haematuria. The urine is dark brown in colour, especially the first of the morning.
- Thrombosis; this is usually in veins rather than arteries and tends to affect hepatic, abdominal, cerebral, and subdermal veins. The exact presentation will depend upon the veins involved e.g. Budd-Chiari syndrome abdominal, or cerebral vein thrombosis . Thrombosis of dermal veins can cause raised, painful, and red nodules in the skin over large areas, like the entire back. It subsides within a few weeks but occasionally necrosis requires skin grafts.
- Deficient haematopoiesis; this will produce symptoms of anaemia like shortness of breath on exertion. Neutropenia and thrombocytopenia may allow infection and purpura.
Other symptoms include oesophageal spasms that occur in the morning and resolve in the day. Males often have erectile dysfunction.
Physical signs will depend upon the systems involved.
- Anaemia will cause pallor.
- Infections may produce fever and purpura may be apparent.
- The Budd-Chiari syndrome will produce hepatomegaly and ascites. There may be splenomegaly too.
- Ischaemia of the gut produces absent bowel sounds.
- Cerebral vein thrombosis produces papilloedema.
- Red, painful nodules may occur in the skin.
- Dipstick tests of urine for blood will be positive, but microscopy will not show red blood cells. This is the difference between haematuria and haemoglobinuria.
- Erythrocytes and other cells have absent membrane proteins DAF (CD55) and MIRL (CD59). This can be detected by flow cytometry. This is the latest diagnostic test which may replace the Ham and sugar water tests as the "gold standard" for diagnosis.
- FBC will show varying degrees of anaemia, usually of a normochromic, normocytic picture although high cell turnover can produce folate deficiency and a picture of macrocytosis. White cells and platelets may be reduced. The reticulocyte response may be high or low depending upon whether the picture is predominantly one of haemolytic anaemia or aplastic anaemia.
- LDH is elevated with haemolysis and haptoglobin low or absent.
- Bone marrow examination will differentiate an erythroid and hyperplastic marrow during the haemolytic phase or a hypoplastic marrow in the aplastic phase.
- Leucocytes have a low alkaline phosphatase score as in chronic myeloid leukaemia.
- The Ham test shows that erythrocytes are lysed by complement if the blood is acidified.
- The sugar water test involves lysis of erythrocytes by an isotonic solution of sucrose. It is more sensitive but less specific than the Ham test.
- The complement lysis sensitivity test enables patients to be classified into one of three groups with prognostic implications.
- Group I has normal sensitivity to complement.
- Group II is moderately more sensitive than normal.
- Group III shows marked sensitivity at dilutions of 15 to 20-fold. This indicated severe disease and mean life span of 10 to 15 days.
- MRI with contrast can demonstrate saggital vein thrombosis.
- Venography can show thrombosis of major veins.
- MRI, ultrasound or Tc99m colloid scan of liver and spleen may demonstrate hypoperfusion.
- Paroxysmal cold haemoglobinuria
- Haemolytic Anaemia
- Ischaemic bowel disease
The combination of haemolytic anaemia, aplastic anaemia and thrombosis is diagnostic but not all 3 features may be immediately apparent.
Non-Drug
Blood transfusion may be required but leucocyte depletion is necessary to reduce antibody formation aggravating haemolysis.
Drug
- Thromboprophylaxis: The 10-year risk of thrombosis in patients with large PNH clones i.e. PNH granulocytes >50% has been shown to be 44%, compared with 5.8% in those with <50% PNH granulocytes.2 Warfarin prophylaxis with a target INR of 2.5, is recommended in patients with large PNH clones who have a platelet count greater than 100 x109/l.3Anticoagulation can also be considered for patients with smaller clones and platelet counts less than 100 x109/l after considering additional risk factors for thrombosis and bleeding.
- Prednisolone successfully reduces haemolysis in about 70% of cases. The dose for adults is 20 to 40mg daily during periods of haemolysis, reduced to that dose on alternate days at other times.
- High turnover of cells in haemolysis requires additional folate and folic acid 1mg daily is usually given.
- Normally haemolysis does not require iron supplements (as iron is not lost from the body), but in this condition haemoglobinuria results in loss of iron, that may need replacement. However, this can stimulate reticulocytosis, which may trigger haemolysis. This can be prevented by adding prednisone to replacement therapy.
- Anabolic steroids like stanazolol are often useful for stimulating the aplastic marrow. In women danazol is preferred as it is less virilising.4
- Eculizumab is an antibody against terminal complement protein C5. It reduces intravascular haemolysis, haemoglobinuria, and the need for transfusion. This has been shown to improve quality of life in patients with PNH.5,6
Surgical
The disease can be cured by bone marrow transplantation, but the problems associated with getting a compatible donor mean that it is usually reserved for the most severe cases, where there is aplastic anaemia or transformation to leukaemia.
This depends upon severity of symptoms and complications. The abnormal clone responsible for the disease may die out, but this usually takes at least 5 years and may be 15 to 20 years. Acute infection can reactivate the clone.
- Chronic anaemia alone is compatible with long survival, but thrombosis has a poor prognosis. Diagnosis of thrombosis can be difficult and requires awareness. Prophylactic anticoagulation has not been properly assessed because of inadequate data.
- The aplastic phase is often complicated by thrombosis and prognosis is poor. Aplastic anaemia occurs in about 10 to 20% of PNH and about 5% of patients with aplastic anaemia develop PNH. Of those who develop PNH from aplastic anaemia the disease seems less severe but this may be an aberration due to early detection.7
Document References
- Bessler M, Hillmen P; Somatic mutation and clonal selection in the pathogenesis and in the control of paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria. Semin Hematol. 1998 Apr;35(2):149 [abstract]
- Hall C, Richards S, Hillmen P; Primary prophylaxis with warfarin prevents thrombosis in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH). Blood. 2003 Nov 15;102(10):3587 [abstract]
- Guidelines on oral anticoagulation, British Committee for Standards in Haematology (2005)
- Harrington WJ Sr, Kolodny L, Horstman LL, et al; Danazol for paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria. Am J Hematol. 1997 Feb;54(2):149 [abstract]
- Hillmen P, Hall C, Marsh JC, et al; Effect of eculizumab on hemolysis and transfusion requirements in patients with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria. N Engl J Med. 2004 Feb 5;350(6):552 [abstract]
- Hillmen P, Young NS, Schubert J, et al; The complement inhibitor eculizumab in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria. N Engl J Med. 2006 Sep 21;355(12):1233 [abstract]
- Nagarajan S, Brodsky RA, Young NS, et al; Genetic defects underlying paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria that arises out of aplastic anemia. Blood. 1995 Dec 15;86(12):4656 [abstract]
Internet and Further Reading
- PNH - OMIM
- Besa EC. Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria. e-Medicine; May 2007
- Leeds University Teaching Hospital. Paroxysmal Nocturnal Haemoglobinuria Patient Information
DocID: 2575
Document Version: 21
DocRef: bgp1017
Last Updated: 9 Jul 2007
Review Date: 8 Jul 2009
Disclaimer: Patient UK has no control of the content of the above links. Inclusion does not imply endorsement by Patient UK.
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