AI Article Synopsis

  • Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) can have serious outcomes if not properly managed, and misdiagnosis can delay treatment; a study found that 20% of TTP cases were initially misdiagnosed.
  • Common misdiagnoses included autoimmune thrombocytopenia, often linked to autoimmune hemolytic anemia, and misdiagnosed patients tended to be female, have autoimmune disorders, and display specific lab results, such as antinuclear antibodies and low schistocyte counts.
  • Though misdiagnosed patients experienced longer recovery for platelet counts, their disease was less severe at diagnosis compared to those accurately diagnosed, indicating that certain lab results should not dismiss a TTP diagnosis, especially in cases with

Article Abstract

Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP) has a devastating prognosis without adapted management. Sources of misdiagnosis need to be identified to avoid delayed treatment. We studied 84 patients with a final diagnosis of severe (<10%) acquired ADAMTS13 deficiency-associated TTP from our National database that included 423 patients, who had an initial misdiagnosis (20% of all TTP). Main diagnostic errors were attributed to autoimmune thrombocytopenia, associated (51%) or not (37%) with autoimmune hemolytic anemia. At admission, misdiagnosed patients were more frequently females (P = .034) with a history of autoimmune disorder (P = .017) and had organ involvement in 67% of cases; they had more frequently antinuclear antibodies (P = .035), a low/undetectable schistocyte count (P = .001), a less profound anemia (P = .008), and a positive direct antiglobulin test (DAT) (P = .008). In multivariate analysis, female gender (P = .022), hemoglobin level (P = .028), a positive DAT (P = .004), and a low schistocytes count on diagnosis (P < .001) were retained as risk factors of misdiagnosis. Platelet count recovery was significantly longer in the misdiagnosed group (P = .041) without consequence on mortality, exacerbation and relapse. However, patients in the misdiagnosed group had a less severe disease than those in the accurately diagnosed group, as evidenced by less organ involvement at TTP diagnosis (P = .006). TTP is frequently misdiagnosed with autoimmune cytopenias. A low schistocyte count and a positive DAT should not systematically rule out TTP, especially when associated with organ failure.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajh.24665DOI Listing

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