Objective: To determine the interest of plasmapheresis in the management of cancer-associated microangiopathic haemolytic anaemia (MHA) not due to cancer treatment.
Material and methods: [corrected] National retrospective study using the file of the French Hemapheresis Society.
Results: We isolated 6 patients (5 men and a woman aged 32 to 69-year-old) who had prostatic (4 cases) or breast carcinomas or Hodgkin's disease. Diagnosis of cancer preceeded MHA in 3 patients (from 2 to 4 years). Bone or bone marrow metastases were demonstrated in 5 patients. The clinical presentation included anuria (4 cases), bleeding (4 cases), and laboratory findings were consistent with microangiopathic haemolysis and thrombopenia in all cases and intravascular coagulation (2 cases) and/or renal failure (4 cases). MHA symptomatic treatment included 4 to 10 courses of plasmapheresis, extra-renal epuration (4 patients), anticoagulation (4 patients) and/or antiagregant (3 cases), haemodialysis (4 cases) and vincristine (2 cases). Cancer treatment consisted of antitumoural chemotherapy (2 cases) and/or hormonotherapy (5 cases). In all cases, haemolysis, thrombopenia and intravascular coagulation were controlled within 30 days. MHA treatment was effective alone in 3 patients. No relapse were observed in 3 patients whereas the course of cancer continued in 2 patients. Two patients relapsed and died from MHA after 4 and 36 months. Two patients relapsed and died from MHA within a few months and 1 was lost to follow-up.
Conclusion: Symptomatic treatment of cancer-associated MHA including plasmapheresis may be useful while waiting for an aetiologic management of the tumour.