Pathophysiology and Diagnosis of Drug-Induced Immune Thrombocytopenia
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Abstract
Drug-induced immune thrombocytopenia (DITP) is a life-threatening clinical syndrome
that is under-recognized and dicult to diagnose. Many drugs can cause immune-mediated
thrombocytopenia, but the most commonly implicated are abciximab, carbamazepine, ceftriaxone,
eptifibatide, heparin, ibuprofen, mirtazapine, oxaliplatin, penicillin, quinine, quinidine, rifampicin,
suramin, tirofiban, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and vancomycin. Several dierent mechanisms
have been identified in typical DITP, which is most commonly characterized by severe
thrombocytopenia due to clearance and/or destruction of platelets sensitized by a drug-dependent
antibody. Patients with typical DITP usually bleed when symptomatic, and biological confirmation of
the diagnosis is often dicult because detection of drug-dependent antibodies (DDabs) in the patient’s
serum or plasma is frequently not possible. This is in contrast to heparin-induced thrombocytopenia
(HIT), which is a particular DITP caused in most cases by heparin-dependent antibodies specific for
platelet factor 4, which can strongly activate platelets in vitro and in vivo, explaining why aected
patients usually have thrombotic complications but do not bleed. In addition, laboratory tests are
readily available to diagnose HIT, unlike the methods used to detect DDabs associated with other
DITP that are mostly reserved for laboratories specialized in platelet immunology.
