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Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies Muhammad Shoaib Khan GM Centre - 1

Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

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Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies. Muhammad Shoaib Khan GM Centre - 1. a globin. b globin. b globin. a globin. Hemoglobin structure. Hgb A tetramer. Development period. a cluster - chromosome 16. Globin chain component. % of adult Hgb. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Diagnostic Hematology:Disorders of Hemoglobin andGammopathies

Muhammad Shoaib KhanGM Centre - 1

Page 2: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Hemoglobin structure

a globin globin

globin globin

Hgb A tetramer

Page 3: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Globin chain synthesis cluster - chromosome 16

cluster - chromosome 11

Gower 1

Portland Embryonic

Gower II

F Fetal <1%

A2 1.5-3.5%Adult

A >95%

Glo

bin

chai

n

com

pone

nt

Hgb n

ame

Devel

opm

ent

per

iod

% o

f adu

lt H

gb

G A

Page 4: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Thalassemia• Heterogenous group of disorders due to an imbalance of and

globin chain synthesis– thalssemia: -globin chain production decreased– thalassemia: globin chain production decreased

• The globin chains that are produced are normal

• Quantitative deficiency:– o thalassemia: No -globin chain is made– + thalassemia: decreased -globin chain is made

• With 4 genes and 2 genes there is wide phenotypic variation

Page 5: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Incidence of Thalassemia

• ~100,000 patients with homozygous -thalassemia world-wide

• Found in Mediterranean countries, South Asia and Far East

• Prevalence in the United Sates is increasing due to population migration

Page 6: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Alpha Thalassemia• Inadequate production of alpha chains• Hemoglobin analysis normal; can be detected by globin gene analysis• Absence of 1-2 alpha chains

– Common– Asymptomatic– Does not require therapy

• Absence of 3 alpha chains– Microcytic anemia (Hgb 7-10)– Splenomegaly

• Absence of 4 alpha chains– Hydrops fetalis (non-viable)

Page 7: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

chains Hgb (g/dl) MCV (fl) RDW

/ Normal Normal Normal

/- 12-14 75-85 Normal

-/- or - -/ 11-13 70-75

- -/- 7-10 50-60

- -/- - - - -

Laboratory Findings in Alpha Thalassemia

Page 8: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Beta Thalassemia

Minor (Trait) / + or / ° 10-13

Intermedia +/+ 7-10

Major +/° or °/° < 7

ClinicalSyndrome Genotype Hemoglobin (g/dl)

Inadequate production of chains

Page 9: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Beta Thalassemia - Hgb analysis

Minor (Trait) / + or / ° 90-94 3.5-8 1-10

Intermedia +/+ 5-60 2-8 20-80%Major +/° 2-10 1-6 >85

°/° 0 1-6 >94

ClinicalSyndrome Genotype A A2 F

Hemoglobin analysis: Increased levels of Hgb A2 and Hgb F

Page 10: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Approach to Beta Thalassemia

• Screening/counseling

• RBC transfusion therapy

• Agents to increase hemoglobin F (Hydroxyurea)

• Bone marrow transplantation

Page 11: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Clinical Presentations of Abnormal Hemoglobins

• Sickling disorder

• Thalassemia or microcytic anemia

• Cyanosis

• Erythrocytosis

• Hemolytic anemia

• Asymptomatic (screening or family study)

Page 12: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Sickle Cell Disease

• Inherited as autosomal recessive• Point mutation in beta globin (6 Glu Val)• Gene occurs in 8% of African-Americans

Page 13: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Relative Frequency of Hemoglobin Variants

Page 14: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Screening for Sickle Cell Trait and Disease

• RBC lysate with concentrated phosphate buffer and sodium hydrosulfite

• Incubate 10-20 min

Page 15: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Hemoglobin Electrophoresis: Methodology

• Separates hemoglobins on solid support media– Cellulose acetate (Alkaline gel)– Citrate agar (Acid gel)

• Inexpensive and quickly prepared

• Sharp resolution of major hemoglobin bands

• Electrophoretic variability based on charge

Page 16: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

QuickTime™ and aPhoto - JPEG decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Hemoglobin electrophoresis

Page 17: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Hemoglobin electrophoresis:Variants of sickle cell anemia

Page 18: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Hemoglobin electrophoresis:Identification of abnormal hemoglobins

Page 19: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

High Pressure Liquid Chromatography (HPLC)

• Separates hemoglobins by a cation exchange column

• Resolution of various hemoglobins including Hgb F is excellent

• Procedure can be automated leading to reliable interpretation

• Hemoglobin fractions can be quantified

Page 20: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

HPLC: Normal Adult Hemoglobin

A1CA1C

AA00

Page 21: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

HPLC: Sickle cell trait

Page 22: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

HPLC:Sickle cell anemia (Hgb SS)

A 2

Hb F

Page 23: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

HPLC:Hgb SC disease

Page 24: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Monoclonal Gammopathies

• Laboratory evaluation of gammopathies

• Diseases associated with gammopathies

• Common clinical syndromes

Page 25: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Clinical indications for the evaluation of immunoglobulins

• Normochromic normocytic anemia

• Nephrotic syndrome in a non-diabetic patient

• Osteolytic lesions

• Lymphadenopathy

• Non-ischemic heart failure

• Elevated total serum protein

• Hypercalcemia

Page 26: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies
Page 27: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies
Page 28: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies
Page 29: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies
Page 30: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies
Page 31: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Free light chains

• Have been detected in urine for >50 years *• Polyclonal antibody against free LC• Purified so no cross-reactivity and does not bind to intact

immunoglobulin• Bound to latex beads - detected by a variety of techniques

(turbidity)

* Korngold and Lapiri Cancer: (1956) 9:262-272

Page 32: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Representative sensitivity levels

Kappa Lambda

SPEP 500-2000 mg/L 500-2000mg/L

IFE 150-500 mg/L 150-500 mg/L

Free light chains 1.5 mg/L 3.0 mg/L

Page 33: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Comparison of FLC measurements in serum and urine in healthy individuals

0

1

10

100

0.1 1 10 100

FLC (mg/L)

_ F

LC

(m

g/L

)

Normal serumNormal urine

FLC (mg/L)

F

LC

(m

g/L

)

Page 34: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Serum free light chains

0.1

1

10

100

1000

10000

100000

0.1 1 10 100 1000 10000 100000

FLC (mg/L)

F

LC

(m

g/L

)

Normal sera

κ LCMM

λ LCMM

IIMM

High pIgG

AL Amyloidosis

Renal impairment

NSMM

IFE Sensitivity

SPE Sensitivity

F

LC

(m

g/L

)

Composite Figure of serum free light chain concentrations in various diseases

Page 35: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Potential uses of serum free light chains

• Sensitive marker for diagnosing monoclonal lymphoproliferative diseases

• ratio may be a prognostic marker for MGUS

• Useful marker in non-secretory myeloma or patients with only Bence-Jones proteinuria

• Marker to follow disease

Page 36: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Lymphoproliferative Disorders Commonly Associated with a Monoclonal Gammopathy

• Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS)

• Multiple myeloma• Waldenstroms macroglobulinemia• Amyloidosis

Page 37: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Monoclonal Gammopathies of Undetermined Significance (MGUS)

• Commonly found on serum protein electrophoresis• Occurs in ~2% of persons > 50 years of age• Characteristics

– Low serum monoclonal protein concentration (<3 g/dl)– Less than 5% plasma cells in bone marrow– Little or no monoclonal protein in urine– Absence of lytic bone lesions– No anemia, hypercalcemia, or renal insufficiency

Page 38: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

“Benign Monoclonal Gammopathy” Course of MGUS in 241 Patients

Median follow-up 22 years

Group Description No. % 1 No substantial increase of serum 46 19 or urine monoclonal protein (benign) 2 Monoclonal protein ≥3.0g.dl but 23 10 no myeloma or related disease 3 Died of unrelated causes 113 47 4 Development of myeloma, 59 24 amyloidosis or related disease Total 241 100

N Engl J Med 2002;346:564-9 (Updated)Am J Med 1978; 64:814-26

Page 39: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Patterns of Monoclonal Protein Increase

Multiple myelomaPattern No. patients (%)

Stable with sudden increase 19 (25%)Stable with gradual increase 9 (12%)Gradual increase 9 (12%)Sudden increase 11 (15%)Stable 10 (13%)Indeterminate 17 (23%)

N Engl J Med 2002:346; 564-9

Page 40: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Summary:(MGUS)

• Monoclonal proteins rarely disappear spontaneously (<5%)

• MGUS is a risk factor for multiple myeloma and related disorders

• Risk of progression to multiple myeloma or related disorders is increased with higher initial monoclonal protein levels

• Risk of progression is ~1 % per year

Page 41: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Multiple Myeloma: Incidence and Etiology

• 13,000 cases/year in USA• Median age - 65 yrs.• Incidence in African-Americans is two-fold other

ethnic groups• Familiar clusters are rare• Environmental/occupational exposures have been

implicated

Page 42: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Multiple Myeloma: Clinical Manifestations

• Bone pain/skeletal involvement• Fatigue/anemia• Renal insufficiency• Hypercalcemia• Neurologic symptoms• Infections

Page 43: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Laboratory evaluation

CBC with peripheral smear Chemistry panel (Include calcium and creatinine) SPEP/UPEP (immunofixation electrophoresis) Urinalysis/24 hr urine for protein Bone marrow exam Skeletal survey LDH and 2-microglobulin Serum viscosity

Page 44: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Peripheral smear: Plasma cell

Page 45: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Bone marrow aspirate: Plasma cell infiltrate

Page 46: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies
Page 47: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Diagnostic Criteria for Multiple Myeloma

Major criteria I. Bone marrow plasmacytosis > 30% II. Histologic diagnosis of plasmacytoma III. Serum paraprotein IgG > 3.5 g/dl or IgA > 2.0 g/dl

Minor criteria a. Bone marrow plasmacytosis 10-30% b. Serum paraprotein less than major criteria c. Osteolytic lesion d. Hypogammaglobulinemia

One major criteria and one minor criteria Minor criteria a + b and one other

Page 48: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Waldenstroms MacroglobulinemiaIncidence and clinical features

• 1,500 cases/year in USA• Median age -, 63 yrs• Presenting symptoms

– Weakness and fatigue 44%

– Hemorrhagic manifestations 44%

– Weight loss 23%

– Neurologic symptoms 11%

– Visual disturbances 8%

– Raynauds phenomenon 3%

Page 49: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Waldenstroms Macroglobulinemia:Clinical Features

• Tumor infiltration– Bone marrow 90%– Splenomegaly 38%– Lymphadenopathy 30%

• Circulating IgM– Hyperviscosity syndrome 15-20%– Cryoglobulinemia 5-15%– Cold agglutinin disease 5-10%– Bleeding disorders 10%

• Tissue IgM– Neuropathy 10-20%

Page 50: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies
Page 51: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Amyloidosis: Classification and Biochemical Composition

• Primary amyloidosis– Immunoglobulin light chain (AL)

• Secondary amyloidosis– Amyloid A protein (AA)– Synthesized by liver as an acute phase reactant

• Hereditary amyloidosis– Transthyretin-derived amyloid (ATTR)

Page 52: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Primary Amyloidosis: Clinical Features• Nephropathy

– Renal function loss 80– Proteinuria 75

• Cardiomyopathy– Heart failure 40-50

• Neuropathy– Polyneuropathy 36– Orthostatic hypotension 26– Carpal tunnel syndrome 8

• Enteropathy– Hepatomegaly 57– Macroglossia 32– Diarrhea ± Malabsorption 8

% involved

Page 53: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Primary Amyloidosis: Histopathology

H&E Congo Red

Tongue(Macroglossia)

Page 54: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Primary amyloidosisKey points

1. Suspect amyloidosis when a patient has unexplained:Nephrotic range proteinuria with or without renal insufficiencyCardiomyopathy manifested by fatigue or CHFPeripheral neuropathyHepatomegaly

2. Pursue diagnosis if:A monoclonal protein is detected in serum or urine

3. Confirm diagnosis with Congo red stain of:Bone marrowSubcutaneous fatOther affected tissue

4. Perform echocardiogram to assess prognosis

5. Begin systemic treatment

Page 55: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Common clinical syndromesassociated with monoclonal gammopathies

• Bleeding disorders

• Hyperviscosity

• Cryoglobulinemia

• Peripheral neuropathy

Page 56: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Hemostatic defects associated withMonoclonal proteins

Effect on hemostasis Assay

Inhibition of platelet aggregation PFA; Bleeding time

Inhibition of fibrin polymerization Thrombin time

Acquired von Willebrand disease VWF activity and antigen

Acquired factor X deficiency Factor X activity

Page 57: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Acquired factor X deficiency

• Low factor X levels (<50%)• Severe bleeding with activity <10%• Associated with amyloidosis• Factor X binds to amyloid deposits in tissues• Treatment

– Underlying amyloidosis– Splenectomy– Large volumes of FFP/plasma exchange

Page 58: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Hyperviscosity syndrome

• Associated with Waldenstroms macroglobulinemia (15-20% of patients)• Measure serum viscosity (normal <1.8)• Clinical syndrome of hyperviscosity occurs >4.0• Symptoms

– Headaches

– Other neurologic symptoms (dizziness, mental status changes

– Blurry vision

– Easy bleeding

Page 59: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies
Page 60: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Cryoglobulinemia

• Type I (monoclonal) cryoglobulin• Associated with any lymphoproliferative disorder

– Waldenstroms macroglobulinemia 10-20%

• Symptoms– Raynaud phenomenon– Purpura– Renal insufficiency – Arthralgia

• Blood handling is difficult– Collect blood in 37° C tube– Transport and centrifuge at 37° C– Chill serum to 4° C for 48 hrs– Assay for cryoglobulin

Page 61: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Peripheral smear: Cryoglobulinemia

Page 62: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies
Page 63: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies
Page 64: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies
Page 65: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Neuropathies associated withmonoclonal protein disorders

• Associated with any lymphoproliferative disease

• Target antigens are occasionally identified (MAG; myelin associated glycoprotein)

• Symmetric, distal, sensory or sensorimotor

• May simulate CIDP (Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy)

• Associated with any class of monoclonal protein

Page 66: Diagnostic Hematology: Disorders of Hemoglobin and Gammopathies

Summary

• Lymphoproliferative disorders associated with monoclonal proteins are common

• Diagnosis may be difficult

• Treatment requires identification of underlying disease and any associated clinical syndromes