NHS Blood and Transplant, London, UK.
Department of Histopathology, St Thomas' Hospital, Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust & King's College London School of Medicine, London, UK.
Br J Haematol. 2019 Aug;186(3):499-502. doi: 10.1111/bjh.15925. Epub 2019 Apr 24.
Post-transfusion hyperhaemolysis syndrome (PTHS) is a rare life-threatening transfusion complication reported mainly in sickle cell patients. Its pathogenesis is poorly understood. Antibody-mediated haemolysis and bystander effect have been proposed as putative mechanisms, but in half of cases, red cell antibodies are undetectable, and PTHS develops despite transfusion of cross-matched compatible RBC. An alternate hypothesis proposes activated macrophages as the main drivers of red cell destruction through direct phagocytosis. We report the histopathological findings of two patients with PTHS showing extensive macrophage expansion and erythrophagocytosis, supportive of macrophage activation driving PTHS. This supports a possible role for novel therapies that target macrophage activation.
输血后高血红蛋白血症综合征(PTHS)是一种罕见的危及生命的输血并发症,主要发生在镰状细胞病患者中。其发病机制尚不清楚。抗体介导的溶血和旁观者效应被认为是可能的机制,但在一半的病例中,红细胞抗体无法检测到,尽管输注交叉匹配相容的 RBC,但仍会发生 PTHS。另一种假说提出活化的巨噬细胞通过直接吞噬作用作为红细胞破坏的主要驱动因素。我们报告了两例 PTHS 患者的组织病理学发现,表现为巨噬细胞广泛扩张和红细胞吞噬作用,支持巨噬细胞活化驱动 PTHS。这支持了针对巨噬细胞活化的新型治疗方法的可能作用。