14.13 (8.3) Anemia, Cytopenias, And Thrombosis In PC Flashcards

1
Q

List four causes of anemia in pt with advanced illness

A

Microcytic anemia:
TAILS - nutritional deficiencies

Normocytic anemia:
Poor production (low to normal retic) - anemia of chronic disease, bone marrow infiltration, myelosuppression from chemo
High production (high retic) - acute blood loss, hemolysis

Macrocytic anemia:
B12/folic acid deficiency
Liver impairment

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2
Q

Pathophysiology of anemia of chronic disease?

A

IMMUNOLOGICAL reaction secondary to inflammation and malignancy leading to release of cytokines causing:

1) uptake and storage of iron in macrophages and monocytes -> iron-deficient erythropoiesis occurring in bone marrow replete with iron

2) suppress kidney ability to produce erythropoietin

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3
Q

How does anemia of chronic disease show up in bloodwork? How to differentiate from iron def anemia?

A

Normocytic (can be microcytic)
Low retic count
Low iron, normal/high Fe (reflective of total body iron storage) and low TIBC (reflective of transferrin)

Iron def anemia: microcytic anemia, low iron, low Fe and high TIBC

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4
Q

List three side effects of oral iron

A

Nausea
Heartburn, abdo pain
Constipation
Diarrhea

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5
Q

When to give oral versus parenteral iron

A

Oral iron:
Generally preferred as less SEs

Parenteral iron:
- Intolerant of oral iron
- Intestinal malabsorption
- Losing iron more quickly than can be replaced with oral iron

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6
Q

A pt with small bowel resection develops macrocytic anemia with normal b12 levels. What are they likely deficient in?

A

Folic acid

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7
Q

You order a peripheral blood smear for a pt with anemia. It comes back showing nucleated rbcs, myeloid white cell precursors, and tear drop rbcs. What process does this represent? What test can you order to confirm diagnosis?

What three solid tumors are most likely to cause this?

A

Bone marrow infiltration
Bone marrow biopsy

Breast
Lung
Prostate

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8
Q

Patients with ANC (absolute neutrophil count) < or = to 100 cells/microlitre for >7 days should be considered for?

A

Fluoroquinolone prophylaxis (levo or cipro) to prevent febrile neutropenia

Cover pseudomonas

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9
Q

What antibiotic to use with febrile neutropenia?

How long to treat?

A

Anti-pseudomonal beta lactam (e.g. piptazo, meropenem) +/- Vanco

Treat until ANC recovery (> or = to 500 cells/microliter) plus duration appropriate for site of infection and organism

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10
Q

What is DIC (disseminated intravascular coagulopathy)?

What does it lead to?

A

OVERPRODUCTION of PROCOAGULANTS (overwhelms anticoagulant mechanism) leading to:

1) systemic generation of intravascular microthrombi (clotting) –> ischemic organ failure (e.g. liver, renal, intestinal, respiratory)

2) consumption of plts, fibrinogens -> bleeding

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11
Q

List three risk factors for DIC in patients with cancer

A

Advanced stage of cancer
Chemotherapy
Anti estrogen therapy
Advanced age

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12
Q

List 3 triggers of DIC

A

Sepsis
Immobilization
Liver mets

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13
Q

Indicate whether the following lab indices increase or decrease in DIC
Platelets
Fibrinogen
aPTT
INR

A

Platelets - decrease
Fibrinogen-decrease
aPTT- increase
INR- increase

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14
Q

Treatment of DIC

A

Cardiovascular support
Replacement of coagulation factors by blood products (fibronogen, factor VIII, fresh frozen plasma)

Can consider: plt transfusion, anticoagulants carefully if main issue is clotting

FS - UpToDate:
1. Treat underlying cause
2. Supportive management - hemodynamic, ventilatory, hydration
3. Transfusions as needed - RBC, platelets, fresh frozen plasma
4. Anticoagulant if indicated

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15
Q

When to transfuse Hb?

When to transfuse plt?

A

Hb less than 70-80, or
Hb <100 + symptomatic + palliative

Plts less than 10, or
Active bleeding

UpToDate for plt transfusions:
< 10 (risk of spontaneous bleeding)
< 20+infection
<50+bleeding
<100+CNS bleeding

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16
Q

List five types of transfusion rxn (2 common rxns and then 3 less common)

A

Most common:
Fever
Mild allergy

Other types:
Sepsis
Anaphylaxis
Acute intravascular hemolytic
Acute extravascular hemolytic
Transfusion associated circulatory overload (TACO)
Transfusion related acute lung injury (TRALI)

17
Q

EPO works by? Traditionally used for?

A

GROWTH FACTOR for red cell progenitors in bone marrow

Advanced renal disease and cancer Tx related anemia (hb < 100)

18
Q

Indication of EPO in cancer patient?

A

Patients using myelosuppressive chemo with Hb <100g/L

19
Q

How does cancer increase risk of VTE

A

Virchow’s triad:
- Venous stasis - tumors causing compression, paralysis from SCC, hospitalizations
- Endothelial injury of blood vessels - chemo, surgery, central venous access
- Hypercoagulability - cancer causing procoagulant changes

20
Q

What are four targets of VTE tx in the initial phase

A

Improve symptoms (pain, chest pain, SOB)
Prevent clot extension
Preventing embolic events
Prevent early recurrence
Decreasing upfront mortality

21
Q

Preferred anti-coagulants in cancer associated thrombosis

A

LMWH (e.g. dalteparin) - effective and safer
DOACs (e.g. rivaroxaban)

22
Q

What is the only acceptable indication for IVC filter? Why?

A

Patients with acute lower extremity DVT and absolute contraindication to anticoagulation

IVC filter is costly and has complications:
- Recurrent DVT
- Filter fracture and migration
- Vessel and organ penetration