HEMATOLOGY, ONCOLOGY, ALLERGY,
AND IMMUNOLOGY
May be further divided (see Table 9.5)
■ Autoimmune (warm and cold antibody) hemolytic anemia
■ Alloimmune (transfusion reaction) hemolytic anemia
■ Drug-induced hemolytic anemia
ALLOIMMUNE
Mediated through antibodies against foreign RBC antigens either through
transfusion of ABO incompatible blood or sensitization to maternal Rh factor
in hemolytic disease of the newborn
DRUG-INDUCEDHEMOLYTICANEMIA
Mediated through formation of drug-induced antibodies, hapten formation,
or immune complex formation
Hemolysis stops with cessation of drugs.
DIAGNOSIS
■ Microspherocytes on peripheral smear
■ Positive Coombs test
TREATMENT
■ Treat underlying cause or stop implicated medication/transfusion.
■ Warm antibody hemolytic anemia may respond to high-dose corticos-
teroids, IV gamma globuline, cytotoxic agents, or splenectomy.
■ Cold antibody hemolytic anemia is generally not responsive to medical
therapy, therefore primary treatment is avoidance of cold.
TABLE 9.5. Classification of Immune-Mediated Hemolytic Anemia
Autoimmune
Warm antibody IgG autoantibody Lymphoproliferative disorders
Bind at body temperature
Cold antibody IgM autoantibody Acute: Mycoplasma pneumonia or
(cold agglutinins) Epstein-Barr infection
Bind at cool temperatures Chronic: lymphoma or Waldenstrom
macroglobulinemia
Alloimmune Antibodies against foreign Transfusion reaction
RBC antigens Hemolytic disease of newborn
Drug-induced Three possible mechanisms:
IgG autoantibody α-Methyldopa, cephalosporins,
ibuprofen
Hapten formation Penicillin, cephalosporin
Immune complex formation Amphotericin B, INH, quinidine,
sulfonamides