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Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

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Page 1: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia

Barb BancroftRN, MSN, PNPenia

Page 2: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Oh, GROW UP!!

• The process of maturation and differentiation• Everything starts with a pleuripotential stem cell—to 2 cell

lines1) Myeloid stem cells—erythrocytes (RBCs), eosinophils*,

neutrophils*, basophils*, monocyte/macrophages, megakaryocytes/thrombocytes/platelets

*collectively called the “granulocytes” because they have granules in their cytoplasm—for staining purposes (red/eosin/acid; white/neutral; blue/basic

2) Lymphoid stem cell—T lymphocytes, NK cells, plasma cells/B lymphocytes

Page 3: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Some normal numbers

Platelets (thrombocytes)—150,000-450,000—less than 100,000 is considered thrombocytopenia

Erythrocytes (RBCs)--4.5 million to 6 million• Gender differences• Women with less blood volume and more fat

tissue than men with more muscle mass• Women closer to the 4.5 million; men up

around the 6 million

Page 4: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Some normal numbers…

• Neutrophils /segs (57-63%) of the total white count; acute inflammation, bacteria, acute necrosis (1.51-7.07)

• NOTE: the precursor to the neutrophil is the band neutrophil; Bands (0-4%) (0.00-.51)—it’s almost mature and can perform many of the functions of the mature neutrophil ; In fact, when a band is released from the bone marrow it only takes 2 hours to mature into a neutrophil

• Eosinophils? 3% of total WBC• Basophils? <1% of total WBC

Page 5: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Cell growth—Too much? Too little?• Too much? Thrombocytosis• Too little? Thrombocytopenia• Too much? Neutrophillia, eosinophillia, basophillia (CML, PV)• Too little? Life-threatening neutropenia (There is no such thing as life-threatening eosinopenia or basopenia)

• OUR FOCUS TODAY? What happens when you don’t have enough?

• Too little? Thrombocytopenia• Too little? Life-threatening neutropenia• Too little? Erythropenia? Anemia

Page 6: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

First question in the work-up of a patient with a “penia”…

• Is this an isolated “penia”?• Normal platelets, RBCs, but just neutropenia?• Thrombocytopenia, but with normal # of

platelets, and normal # of neutrophils?• OR more importantly, is this pancytopenia?

EVERYTHING is “penic”—more ominous but even isolated “penias” require diagnostic acumen

Page 7: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

The neutrophil

• Neutrophils—(phagocytic)—only job in the world is to EAT until it dies

• Cell of acute inflammation• First responder to bacterial invasion• Loves acute necrotic tissue

Page 8: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Drugs and neutropenia• Chemotherapy (all patients)• Cimetidine (Tagamet), ranitidine (Zantac)• Captopril (Capoten), enalapril (Vasotec), amiodarone, quinidine• Zidovudine (Retrovir), vidarabine (Vira-A), • Flucytosine (Ancoban) • ASA, acetaminophen• Anti-convulsants-- Carbamazepine (Tegretol); Phenytoin

(Dilantin) • Antibiotics including metronidazole (Flagyl),gentamicin,

clindamycin, vancomycin, imipenem, PCNs, tetracyclines, TMP-SMX

• Azothiaprine (Imuran)• PTU and methimazole

Page 9: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Other causes of neutropenia

• Bone marrow replacement—tumor infiltration, leukemia, myelofibrosis

• Immunologic—autoimmune (antineutrophil antibodies—SLE, newborns from maternal IgG)

• Metabolic—hyperglycemia (other rare causes of metabolic disorders)

• Nutritional—anorexia nervosa, B12/folate deficiency, copper deficiency

• Sequestration—hypersplenism

Page 10: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Transient neutropenia

• The most common cause is viral infection—influenza, adenovirus, coxsackie virus, RSV, hepatitis A and B, measles, rubella, EBV, CMV, and varicella.

• The neutropenia usually develops in the first 2 days of the illness and may persist for up to one week

• Redistribution of neutrophils (margination pool), sequestration in lymph nodes and BM, marrow suppression)

• low risk for serious infectious complications

Page 11: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

The neutrophil in the world of ONCOLOGY

• Fastest dividing cell in the body as an adult• Chemotherapy and radiation therapy kill cells

that are rapidly dividing causing life-threatening neutropenia

• ANC—absolute neutrophil count• Neutrophils (60%) + bands (4%) = ANC = 64% of

the total WBC• If the total WBC is 10,000/ml³, the ANC is 64%

or 6,400

Page 12: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

The Absolute Neutrophil Count (ANC)

• Neutropenia is defined as an absolute neutrophil count (ANC) <500/mm3 or an ANC of <1,000/mm3 with an expected decline.

• Serious bacterial infection risk increases directly with the following: (1) severity of neutropenia (ANC < 100 cells/mm3 imposes a greater risk than ANC < 500 cells/mm3), (2) rate of ANC decline (rapidly falling rate imposes a greater risk than chronic neutropenia or aplastic anemia), and (3) duration of neutropenia

Page 13: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

The Absolute Neutrophil Count

• When the ANC falls below 500, control of endogenous microbial flora (mouth, gut) is impaired

• When the ANC falls below 200, the inflammatory process is absent.

Page 14: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

The oncology patient with neutropenia

• Patient with a total WBC of 2,000/ml³ is LEUKOPENIC. But, is she NEUTROPENIC? Her neutrophils are 30%, bands are 2%; what’s 32% of 2,000? 640/ml³

• Patient with a total WBC of 2,000/ml³ is LEUKOPENIC. But, is she NEUTROPENIC? Her neutrophils are 50%, bands are 4%; what’s 54% of 2,000? 1080/ml³

• [Neupogen (1991) (filgrastim) and Neulasta (2002)(pegfilgrastim)

Page 15: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Febrile neutropenia

• The most serious immediate consequence of chemotherapy is febrile neutropenia—defined as an absolute neutrophil count of less than 500 cells per cubic millimeter and a temperature of more than 38.5° C.

• Most standard dose chemotherapy regimens are associated with 6 to 8 days of neutropenia

• Neutropenia blunts the inflammatory response to infections, allowing bacterial multiplication and invasion

• Predisposes patients to serious infections and death if severe neutropenia persists for longer than 10-14 days

• (N Engl J Med 2013 Mar 21;368:12)

Page 16: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Neutropenia

• Acute neutropenia, such as that caused by cancer chemotherapy, is more likely to be associated with increased risk of infection than neutropenia of long duration (months to years)

• Rare—usually may manifest in early childhood as a profound constant neutropenia or agranulocytosis

Page 17: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Approach to the patient with thrombocytopenia

• Is this a healthy young adult with thrombocytopenia or an elderly hospitalized ill patient receiving multiple medications?

• Limited differential in the young patient

Page 18: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Approach to the patient with thrombocytopenia

• Myelodysplasia can present in patients presenting with isolated thrombocytopenia who are greater than 60 years of age

• FH (inherited thrombocytopenia is rare)• PE: spleen (mild to moderate splenomegaly is easier to

pick up with abdominal ultrasound); enlarged liver, extremities (a platelet count of 5,000 to 10,000 is required to maintain vascular integrity in the microcirculation. With markedly decreased platelets, petechiae first appear in areas of increased venous pressure, the ankles and feet in an ambulatory patient

Page 19: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Clinical signs of thrombocytopenia

• Petechiae are pinpoint, non-blanching hemorrhages and are usually a sign of decreased platelet number and not platelet dysfunction

• Wet purpura, blood blisters that form on the oral mucosa, are thought to denote an increased risk of life-threatening hemorrhage in the thrombocytopenic patient

• Excessive bruising is seen in disorders of both platelet number and function

Page 20: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Manifestations of platelet deficiency or platelet dysfunction

• Superficial bleeding is the rule with platelet dysfunction or deficiency

• Mucous membrane bleeding—easy bruising, nose bleeds (most common cause?), gum bleeds, blood in the urine (hematuria), blood in the stool (occult blood) –

Page 21: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Causes of thrombocytopenia

• Decreased production—bone marrow depression, marrow infiltration, congenital

• Excessive pooling—hypersplenism• Infection: HIV, EBV, HCV• Coagulopathies—HELLP syndrome, DIC

(meningococcal septicemia)• Increased destruction—Immunologic destruction with autoimmune disease, Henoch-Schonlein purpura, thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP); severe hemorrhage,

Page 22: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP)

• Acquired disorder leading to immune-mediated destruction of platelets and possibly inhibition of platelet release from the megakaryocyte

• Kids? Usually an acute disease following a viral infection

• Adults? More chronic and usually secondary – associated with an underlying disorder

• Autoimmune, especially lupus (SLE) • Infections: HIV, HCV, EBV, Helicobacter pylori

Page 23: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Lab tests

• Test for HIV, hepatitis C, EBV and other infections depending on the patient, of course

• Coomb’s test if anemia is present (to rule out combined autoimmune hemolytic anemia)

• Is this a 27-year-old female with anemia and thrombocytopenia?

• Is this a 27-year-old male with anemia and thrombocytopenia?

Page 24: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Drugs definitely reported to cause isolated thrombocytopenia

• Abciximab (Reopro)• Acetaminophen• Acyclovir• Aminosalicylic acid• Amiodarone• Amphotericin B• Ampicillin• Carbamazepine• Chlorpropamide• Danazol• Diclofenac• Digoxin

• Eptifibatide• HCTZ• Ibuprofen• Levamisole• Octreotoide• Phenytoin• Quinine• Rifampin • Tamoxifen• Tirofiban• TMP/SMX• vancomycin

Page 25: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Other drugs that decrease platelets or cause platelet dysfunction

• Prescription drugs and platelets: SSRIs (fluoxetine/Prozac; paroxetine/Paxil/Pexeva; sertraline/Zoloft; citalopram/Celexa; escitalopram/Lexapro)—increased risk of bleeding

• Valproic acid – keep eye on platelet counts—more problems…

Page 26: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia

• Thrombocytopenia due to heparin differs from that seen with other drugs in two major ways

1) The thrombocytopenia is not usually severe (not less than 20,000)

2) HIT is not associated with bleeding and, in fact, markedly increases the risk of thrombosis due to antibody formation to a complex that activates platelets

Page 27: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Causes of platelet bleeding

• Don’t forget ETOH abuse also causes thrombocytopenia

Page 28: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Causes of platelet dysfunction

• Ask about OTC and complementary and alternative therapies; over-the-counter such as NSAIDS (24 hours for ibuprofen)*, ASA (7 days);

*Don’t have to stop Celebrex before surgery• the G’s—gingko, ginseng, glucosamine, garlic,

ginger; omega-3s, vitamin E

Page 29: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Platelets

• Just a reminder…some patients can have plenty of platelets but the platelets don’t work

• Qualitative Platelet dysfunction• How well do they “plug a hole”? OLD:

Measure the bleeding time (3-6 minutes)• NEW: PFA – Platelet Function Assay

Page 30: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

One last point about platelets…

• Can you hemorrhage with low platelets?…yes• The rate of the fall is more important than the

total number of platelets in most instances• However, very low platelets, less than 10,000

increase the risk of hemorrhage no matter how fast the platelets fell

Page 31: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Erythropenia () and anemias• What do you need to make happy, healthy RBCs?• Good parents (good genes)--hemoglobinopathies• Healthy thyroid (metabolism and production of RBCs)• Healthy kidney (the hormone erythropoietin to stimulate the

production of RBCs in response to hypoxia)• Iron (dietary deficiency in growing kids and pregnant moms; celiac

disease—poor absorption in distal duodenum; —the major source of iron in adults is recycled RBC—not dietary; hence—loss of blood increases risk)

• B12 –animal protein, stomach IF, ileum for absorption, vegetarians, drugs such as metformin, PPIs, Crohn’s, aging

• Folic acid (B9)—fruits and veggies

Page 32: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

So what can go wrong?

• Lousy genes• Hypothyroidism• Renal failure• Iron deficiency• B12 deficiency• Folic acid deficiency

Page 33: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Anemia

• The skin and mucous membranes may be pale if the hemoglobin is less than 80 – 100 g/L (8-10 g/dL)

• Focus on the areas where vessels are close to the surface such as the mucous membranes, nail beds, and palmar creases

• If the palmar creases are lighter in color than the surrounding skin when the hand is hyperextended, the hemoglobin level is usually less than 80 g/L (8 g/dL)

Page 34: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Get the most bang for your buck with 3 tests

• Hemoglobin • MCV (mean cell volume)—what is the SIZE of the

RBC? Are they too small? microcytic anemia; are they too big? Macrocytic anemia; are they normal size but just too few of them? Normocytic anemia

• Reticulocyte count—is this patient “reticking”—is the bone marrow producing RBCs? 0.5-2% of total RBC count; takes 7-12 days to make and release a “retic” from the bone marrow

Page 35: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Some other numbers…

• Hemoglobin • adult females (12-16 g/dl) (120-160 g/L)• males (14-18)(140-180g/L• What is anemia defined as?• Hemoglobin under 12 g/dl (120 g/LL) for females and under

14 g/dL (130 g/L for males)

Page 36: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

3 tests for anemia that are most important

• MCV (mean cell volume)—what is the SIZE of the red blood cell? Too small (microcytic)? 9 out of 10 cases are caused by iron deficiency anemia; to BIG (macrocytic)? 7 out of 10 are due to either a B12 deficiency or a folic acid deficiency; normal size (normocytic)? Check the thyroid and the kidneys!

Page 37: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Microcytic anemia• MCV 65 (normal 83-97 fl)• 9/10 with iron deficiency anemia• Adults Where’s the bleed? Female? Male? Exercise?

NSAIDS?• Are you pregnant?• Growing kid? Lousy diet• Not growing? Celiac disease from malabsorption

of iron in the duodenum• Tea drinking?• Two other causes of microcytic anemia—lead poisoning,

Thalassemia

Page 38: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Iron and RBCs

• How do we get iron?• Food—especially as children for vertical growth• Food—not so much in adults as we are not growing

vertically and we usually get plenty of iron from our diet (only need 1 mg from diet of the 20 mg used per day—the other 19 mg is recycled through the senescence of old RBCs)

• Pregnancy -- need extra iron to grow a baby

Page 39: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

How do we become deficient in iron?

• Bleeding—anywhere; women have 20% less blood than men, hence, lower iron stores and a greater risk of iron deficiency anemia; also have periods premenopausally which increases risk of iron deficiency due to RBC depletion (and depends on type of period)

• Bleeding—ALWAYS THINK GI, GI, GI

Page 40: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Macrocytic anemia

• MCV greater than 100 fL• MCV between 100 and 120—think booze• MCV greater than 120—think B12 or Folic acid

deficiency (also known as megaloblastic anemia)

Page 41: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Drugs that cause megaloblastic anemia

• Acyclovir (anti-herpes drug)• ASA• Anticonvulsants• Azathioprine (Imuran)• Colchicine (gout)• INH (TB)• Metformin (Glucophage, Glumetza, Fortamet)—type

2 diabetes, PCOS)• MTX (methotrexate)• Proton Pump inhibitors (more in a minute)

Page 42: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

B12 … a few more notes

• Normal B12 range is 200-800 pg/mL• 2,000 to 5,000 mcg of B12 is stored in the liver for 5-7 years;

• Use about 2.4 mcg per day for making RBCs, keeping the myelin in our central and peripheral nervous system healthy, and making serotonin in our “happy” centers

• Takes 5-7 years of no B12 intake to deplete

Page 43: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Clinical conditions associated with B12 deficiency

• Big, immature RBCs—called megaloblastic anemia (MCV is greater than 100 fl)

• Cognitive dysfunction—#1 cause of nutritional dementia• Peripheral neuropathy (one of three top causes in

elderly)• Depression (B12 is a co-factor in the production of

serotonin)• So you have NO energy, you’re demented, can’t feel

your feet and depressed…JEEZZZZ…how important is B12?

Page 44: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

High-risk patients for B12 deficiency

• Over 55• Lack of intrinsic factor (IF); autoimmune gastritis;

gastrectomy patients• No animal protein in the diet; vegetarians; Tea and

Toasters; alcoholics• Liver failure• Malabsorption—Crohn’s disease, celiac disease; gastric

by-pass surgery• Metformin (glucophage)• Proton Pump Inhibitors—inhibit the pump that pumps

HCL acid AND Intrinsic factor; Intrinsic factor binds B12 and moves it to the ileum for absorption

• (Am J Clini Nutr (2007);86:1384)

Page 45: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

B12 supplements?

• The 4 S’s

• Swallow it• Suck it• Snort it• Shoot it…

• Don’t overdose…

Page 46: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

You need Folic acid (B9) to make happy, healthy RBCs

• Dr. George Herbert• 40 days and 40 nights to deplete bone marrow

stores• Maintenance of healthy RBCs--anemia• Maturation of the neural tube (first 28 days)--

NTDs• Take folic acid 400 mcg (0.4 mg) BEFORE you

get pregnant + eat• Green leafys and citrus fruits

Page 47: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Drugs that block folic acid synthesis that are taken longer than 40 days and 40 nights…

• TMP/SFX (Bactrim, Septra)• Rheumatrex (Methotrexate)• Phenytoin (Dilantin)• Oral contraceptives

• Supplement with folic acid

Page 48: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Normocytic anemia

• RBCs 3,000,000• MCV normal

• The anemia of chronic disease—CKD, hypothyroidism, chronic inflammation), cancer (unless a bleed is involved)

Page 49: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

3 tests for anemia that are most important

• Reticulocyte count—how well is the bone marrow making RBCs?

• Is this patient “reticking”?• Is the retic count HIGH? Hemolytic anemia• FYI: Corrected retic count for patients with anemia (NEXT time)

—there is a formula• High retic count means that the bone marrow is making RBCs,

but something is destroying them rapidly—either in peripheral blood or bone marrow (hemolytic)

• Consider drug-induced hemolytic anemia• Drugs? Penicillin, cephalosporin, procainamide, quinidine,

quinine, sulfonamide—drug-induced hemolytic anemias

Page 50: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Diseases with hemolytic anemias and high retic counts

• Sickle cell? Genetic hemoglobinopathy• Thalassemia? (as above)• G6PD deficiency?(as above)• Autoimmune hemolytic anemia (lupus, drugs)• Hemolytic uremic syndrome (drugs, Shiga

toxin producing E.coli)

Page 51: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Coomb’s test

• Coomb’s test—what is it used for? If +, it means an autoimmune process with antibodies against RBCs (drugs, lupus)

Page 52: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Thank you…

• Barb Bancroft, RN, MSN, PNP• Chicago, IL• www.barbbancroft.com

Page 53: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Selected Bibliography

• Bakerman’s ABC of Interpretive Laboratory Data 3rd Printing

• Harrison’s Hematology and Oncology. 2010. McGraw Hill.

• Kee JL. Laboratory and Diagnostic Tests. 2014. Pearson.

• Lam JR, et al. Proton pump inhibitors and H2 receptor antagonist use and vitamin B12 deficiency. JAMA 2013:310(22):2435-2442

Page 54: Lab Tests—what to do with a patient with neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and/or erythropenia Barb Bancroft RN, MSN, PNPenia

Bibliography

• DeJager J, Kooy A, Lehert P, et al. Long-term treatment with metformin in patients with type2 diabetes mellitus and risk of vitamin B12 deficiency: randomized placebo controlled trial. BMJ 2010;340:c2181). Sando KR, Barbora J, Willis C et al. Recent diabetes issues affecting the primary care clinician. Southern Med J 2011;104(6):456-61)