Today we welcome Jennie Y. Law, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine here at the University of Maryland. Dr. Law is a true home grown talent, doing both her medical school and medicine residency here at the University of Maryland before leaving to do her fellowship in Hematology/Oncology at UT Southwestern down in Dallas, Texas. Today she is here to talk about Hemophagocytic Lymphohistiocytosis (HLH), a topic that has puzzled internists, intensivists, and hematologists alike. Review the pathophysiology, learn the criteria for diagnosis – both the HLH 2004 criteria and the newer HSCORE – and go through her treatment algorithms. See why and how you may be overlooking this important diagnosis in your patients!
Clinical Pearls (thanks to Meagan Pate)
- Clinical syndrome of excessive immune activation
- Manifests with signs/symptoms of extreme inflammation
- Diagnostic dilemma
- Rare entity with variable clinical presentations
- Unique pattern of often non-specific clinical findings
- Can encompass a wide spectrum of clinical conditions which converge to cause extreme pathological inflammation
- Normal physiologic mechanisms unable to dampen immune response leads to end-organ damage
- 2 broad groups
- Primary or familial HLH
- Infants with pre-disponsing immune dysfunction
- Autosomal recessive
- Fixed defect of cytotoxic function
- Usually requires infectious trigger to manifest symptoms
- Incidence
- Swedish population studies: 1.2 cases per 1M (1991), but hard to extrapolate
- Texas study: 1 per 100k – higher than previously reported (2010)
- Increased in various ethnic groups
- Important to identify a possible genetic mutation
- Impacts likelihood of recurrence
- Determines need for hematopoietic stem cell transplant
- Anticipates risk of HLH in other family members
- Diagnosis
- Typically infants in first 2 yrs of life
- However, increasing number of case reports of adult onset primary HLH
- Retrospective review with hypomorphic mutations in familial HLH-causing genes
- Altered gene leads to residual level of activity
- Thus, later onset of clinical symptoms and more indolent course
- Retrospective review with hypomorphic mutations in familial HLH-causing genes
- Importantly, older age no longer excludes diagnosis of primary HLH
- Secondary HLH
- Older patients
- Significant immune activation due to variety of antigen challenges
- Infection
- Infection doesn’t help distinguish between primary or secondary – infection is predominant trigger in both
- Viruses most common infectious cause
- EBV most frequent
- CMV
- HSV
- In patients with HIV, HLH can be associated with initiation of HAART (IRIS)
- Also, histoplasmosis, PCP, pneumococcal
- Malignancy, especially hematologic
- Malignancy is the most common etiology in adults with acquired HLH
- Can occur before or during treatment of malignancy
- Rheumatologic/autoimmune disease
- Idiopathic
- No family history or known genetic cause
- Most common cause of death is multisystem organ failure
- Infection
- Specific categorization as primary vs secondary in acute setting is not clinically imperative
- Primary or familial HLH
- Diagnosis
- Scoring systems
- HLH-2004
- Scoring systems
- Developed to standardize clinical trial enrollment
- Incorporates known pathologic mutations
- Limitations
- Sensitivity and specificity not prospectively validated
- Criteria derived solely from pediatric population
- Doesn’t capture clinical features of HLH, e.g. liver failure, DIC
- Limitations
- HSCORE
- Developed in response to limitations of HLH-2004
- First validated score for diagnosis of secondary HLH
- Easy online scoring system found here
- Additional prospective validation still needed
- Bone marrow biopsy
- Finding hemophagocytosis is not pathognomonic
- Not required for diagnosis
- Often not detected at initial presentation
- Important not to make treatment decision solely on bone marrow result
- Finding hemophagocytosis is not pathognomonic
- Ferritin
- Physiologic role
- Manages iron stores
- Positively regulates transcription in response to oxidative stress
- Pro-inflammatory signaling
- Multiple studies looking at various ferritin levels
- Allen et al (2008)
- Ferritin > 500: 100% sensitive but less specific
- Ferritin > 10,000: 90% sensitivity, 96% specificity
- Study only in pediatrics
- Schram et al (2015)
- Ferritin > 50,000 seen in a variety of conditions, e.g. renal failure, hepatocellular injury, infection, hematologic malignancies in the adult population
- However, it does have a high negative predictive value in both adults and children
- Grange et al (2016)
- Ferritin > 4780 significantly predicted ICU mortality
- Did not use HLH-2004 criteria; broadly defined population “MICU patients with hemophagocytosis”
- Allen et al (2008)
- Physiologic role
- Treatment of primary HLH
- Mainstay is chemo-immunotherapy
- HLH-94
- Etoposide + steroids + intrathecal MTX to induce remission
- All primary HLH patients relapsed and died
- Cure only achieved through allogeneic bone marrow transplantation
- Improvement in survivial with combination of chemo-immunotherapy and transplant for primary
- Benefit for patients with secondary HLH – no transplant needed
- Etoposide + steroids + intrathecal MTX to induce remission
- HLH-2004
- Ongoing trial designed to improve initial control of HLH
- Still only pediatric patients
- Initial therapy
- Cyclosporine added to improve treatment intensity without inducing additional myelotoxicity
- HLH-94 didn’t answer whether or not IT therapy beneficial
- Still pending results; until then, HLH-94 recommended for treatment
- Ongoing trial designed to improve initial control of HLH
- Alternative regimens
- Antithymocyte globulin
- Used in combination with cyclosporine, steroids, and intrathecal MTX
- Mahlaoui et al (2007): overall survival 55%, earlier relapses more common
- No RCT comparing ATG versus HLH-94
- Alemtuzumab (salvage therapy)
- Paucity of validated studies examining choice of therapy in refractory HLH
- Monoclonal antibody against CD52
- Antithymocyte globulin
- Treatment of secondary HLH
- Insufficient clinical data to determine which patients with secondary HLH need “full” treatment protocol
- Clinically stable patients with identifiable underlying condition:
- May respond to treatment of underlying condition alone
- g. EBV-triggered HLH -> successfully treated with weekly Rituximab
- May only require treatment with steroids
- But, clinical deterioration should prompt initiation of HLH-specific therapy immediately
- May respond to treatment of underlying condition alone
- Initiation of treatment often clinically counterintuitive
- Starting potent immunosuppression in setting of uncontrolled infection/inflammatory process
- Future directions
- Ongoing clinical trials recruiting patients with acquired HLH
- Tocilizumab to reduce high cytokine levels
- German adult HLH registry
- Offers consultations for physicians caring for adult HLH patients
- Ongoing clinical trials recruiting patients with acquired HLH
Suggested Reading
- Halacli B, Unver N, Halacli SO, Canpinar H, Ersoy EO, Ocal S, Guc D, Buyukasik Y, Topeli A. Investigation of hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis in severe sepsis patients. J Crit Care. 2016 Oct;35:185-90. [Pubmed Link]
- Nikiforow S, Berliner N. The unique aspects of presentation and diagnosis of hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis in adults. Hematology Am Soc Hematol Educ Program. 2015;2015:183-9. [Pubmed Link]