- Drug-induced thrombocytopenia is a reversible form of thrombocytopenia (ie, platelets <150,000/microL) that should be suspected in a patient who presents with new onset of thrombocytopenia or recurrent episodes of acute thrombocytopenia, without an obvious alternative etiology
- The thrombocytopenia is typically isolated (ie, unaccompanied by anemia, leukopenia, leukocytosis, or coagulation abnormalities) and severe (ie, platelet count <20,000/microL with clinical bleeding) in a patient taking one or several different medications or herbal remedies, foods, beverages, or other substances.
- acetaminophen and naproxen, for which drug-dependent, platelet-reactive antibodies have only been identified for drug metabolites and not for the intact drug
- The median time for daily exposure to a drug before thrombocytopenia occurs is six days (range 1 to 10).
- Median recovery after discontinuation of the suspected drug occurred in five to seven days, similar to the median recovery rate of eight days reported from a Danish registry.
- Twenty-three of 266 patients (9 percent) with definite or probable evidence for drug-induced thrombocytopenia had major hemorrhage, including two patients (0.8 percent) who died of bleeding. This mortality rate from bleeding was lower than the value of 3.6 percent reported from a Danish registry
No recommendation for routine monitoring
parameter as the recovery is fast. Suggest following up patient if platelet
counts are decreasing trend upon treatment initiation (platelet turn around
takes an estimated 8-10 days). If values falls further can consider stopping
therapy and monitor for increase after 1 week. If platelet count increases, the
drug can be suspected to be the culprit and avoided
references:
1. www.uptodate.com
2. http://www.clevelandclinicmeded.com
references:
1. www.uptodate.com
2. http://www.clevelandclinicmeded.com
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