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Paediatric-onset Evans syndrome: Breaking away from refractory immune thrombocytopenia.

Nathalie AladjidiThomas PincezFrédéric Rieux-LaucatDiane Nugent
Published in: British journal of haematology (2023)
Since its first description by Evans in 1951, this syndrome has been linked to chronic immune thrombocytopenia with the concurrent or delayed onset of autoimmune haemolytic anaemia or neutropenia. For decades, the evolution of Evans syndrome (ES) has carried a poor prognosis and often resulted in chronic steroid exposure, multiple immune suppressing medications directed against T or B lymphocytes, and splenectomy. This paper presents a new view of ES based on recent advances in genomics which begin to classify patients based on their underlying molecular variants in previously described primary immune disorders. This has opened up new avenues of targeted therapy or bone marrow transplant at rather than broad long-term immune suppression or splenectomy. Importantly, recent studies of the full lifespan of ES suggest that at least 80% of those paediatric patients will progress to various clinical or biological immunopathological manifestations with age despite the resolution of their cytopenias. Those patients merit long-term follow-up and monitoring in dedicated transition programs to improve outcome at the adult age.
Keyphrases
  • bone marrow
  • ejection fraction
  • emergency department
  • intensive care unit
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • gene expression
  • case report
  • copy number
  • genome wide
  • drug induced
  • rectal cancer