++
+++
Essentials of Diagnosis
++
Isolated thrombocytopenia (rule out pseudothrombocytopenia by review of peripheral smear)
Assess for any new causative medications, HIV, hepatitis B and C infections, and Helicobacter pylori infections
Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is a diagnosis of exclusion
+++
General Considerations
++
ITP is an autoimmune condition in which pathogenic antibodies bind platelets, accelerating their clearance from circulation
Growing evidence suggests additional pathophysiologic mechanisms, including a role for T cells
The disorder is primary (idiopathic) in most adult patients, although it can be secondary, ie, associated with
Connective tissue disease (such as lupus)
Lymphoproliferative disease (such as lymphoma)
Medications (see Table 16–7)
Infections (such as HIV, hepatitis C, and H pylori)
Can be exacerbated by SARS-CoV-2 vaccination
Antiplatelet antibody targets include glycoproteins IIb/IIIa and Ib/IX on the platelet membrane, although antibodies are demonstrable in only two-thirds of patients
In addition to production of antiplatelet antibodies, HIV and hepatitis C virus may lead to thrombocytopenia through additional mechanisms (eg, by direct suppression of platelet production [HIV] and cirrhosis-related decreased thrombopoietin production and secondary splenomegaly [hepatitis C virus])
++
++
Mucocutaneous bleeding may be present, depending on the platelet count
Clinically relevant spontaneous bruising, epistaxis, gingival bleeding, or other types of hemorrhage generally do not occur until the platelet count has fallen below 10,000–20,000/mcL (10–20 × 109/L)
Additional disease-specific findings may be present in persons with secondary ITP
+++
Differential Diagnosis
++
Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
Acute leukemia
Myelodysplastic syndrome
Disseminated intravascular coagulation
Early aplastic anemia
Drug toxicity (eg, heparin, sulfonamides, thiazides, quinine)
Alcohol abuse
Hypersplenism
Systemic lupus erythematosus
++
Isolated thrombocytopenia with platelet count < 100,000/mcL (100 × 109/L), often < 25,000/mcL (25 × 109/L)
If substantial bleeding has occurred, anemia may also be present
Serologic testing to exclude hepatitis B and C viruses and HIV infections
++