Cases reported "Hemoglobinuria"

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1/2. Acute onset hemoglobinemia and/or hemoglobinuria and sequelae following Rh(o)(D) immune globulin intravenous administration in immune thrombocytopenic purpura patients.

    Rh(o)(D) immune globulin intravenous (anti-D IGIV) was licensed by the united states food and drug administration (FDA) in March 1995 to treat patients with immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP). Anti-D IGIV induces extravascular hemolysis, an expected adverse reaction that is consistent with the presumed mechanism of action. Between licensure and April 1999, the FDA received 15 reports of hemoglobinemia and/or hemoglobinuria following anti-D IGIV administration that met the case definition for this review. The mechanism responsible for hemoglobinemia and/or hemoglobinuria is unexplained. review of these reports was prompted by the seriousness and the unexpectedness of treatment-associated sequelae experienced by 11 patients. Of these patients, 7 developed sufficient onset or exacerbation of anemia that orders were written for packed red blood cell transfusions, although only 6 patients were transfused. Eight patients experienced the onset or exacerbation of renal insufficiency, and 2 patients underwent dialysis. One patient died due to complications of exacerbated anemia. Six patients experienced 2 to 3 sequelae. Absent validated incidence data, a 1.5% estimated incidence rate from published clinical trial data and a 0.1% estimated reporting rate from FDA and drug utilization data were calculated for reported cases of hemoglobinemia and/or hemoglobinuria. This review presents the first case series of anti-D-IGIV-associated hemoglobinemia and/or hemoglobinuria and provides pretreatment and posttreatment clinical and laboratory findings of the case series patients. The primary purpose of this review is to increase awareness of this potentially serious occurrence among physicians and health care professionals who manage ITP patients treated with anti-D IGIV, thereby enabling prompt recognition and treatment of sequelae. (Blood. 2000;95:2523-2529)
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2/2. disseminated intravascular coagulation associated with acute hemoglobinemia or hemoglobinuria following Rh(0)(D) immune globulin intravenous administration for immune thrombocytopenic purpura.

    The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) licensed Rh(o)(D) immune globulin intravenous (anti-D IGIV) on March 24, 1995, for treatment of immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP). A previous review described data on 15 patients who experienced acute hemoglobinemia or hemoglobinuria following anti-D IGIV administration for ITP or secondary thrombocytopenia. Eleven of those patients also experienced clinically compromising anemia, transfusion with packed red blood cells, renal insufficiency, dialysis, or death. That review suggested that patients receiving anti-D IGIV be monitored for those and other potential complications of hemoglobinemia, particularly disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). Through November 30, 2004, the FDA received 6 reports of DIC associated with "acute hemolysis" (or similar terms), 5 of which involved fatalities. The attending or consulting physicians assessed that acute hemolysis or DIC caused or contributed to each death. This review presents the first case series of DIC associated with acute hemoglobinemia or hemoglobinuria following anti-D IGIV administration for ITP. The purpose of this review is to increase awareness among physicians and other health care professionals that DIC may be a rare but potentially severe complication of anti-D IGIV treatment. Increased awareness of DIC as a diagnostic possibility may enable prompt recognition and medical intervention in affected patients.
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keywords = physician
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