Overview & Mechanisms - Blood Cell Busters
Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) damaging blood cells (RBCs, WBCs, platelets) or bone marrow. Leads to anemia, leukopenia, agranulocytosis, thrombocytopenia, pancytopenia, or aplastic anemia. Mechanisms:
- Immune-mediated Destruction:
- Hapten-induced (e.g., Penicillin causing hemolytic anemia)
- Innocent bystander (e.g., Quinidine causing thrombocytopenia)
- True Autoimmune (e.g., Methyldopa causing hemolytic anemia)
- Direct Dose-Dependent Toxicity:
- Myelosuppression (e.g., Chemotherapeutic agents, Linezolid)
- Idiosyncratic Reactions: Unpredictable, often severe, not dose-related.
- Aplastic anemia (e.g., Chloramphenicol, NSAIDs)
- Agranulocytosis (e.g., Clozapine, Carbimazole, Propylthiouracil)
- Oxidative Hemolysis:
- In G6PD deficient individuals with oxidant drugs (e.g., Primaquine, Sulfonamides, Dapsone).
⭐ Chloramphenicol exhibits two forms of bone marrow toxicity: a common, dose-related, reversible erythroid suppression, and a rare, fatal, idiosyncratic aplastic anemia unrelated to dose or duration of therapy.
Aplastic Anemia & Agranulocytosis - Marrow Mayhem
-
Aplastic Anemia (Pancytopenia + Hypocellular Marrow)
- Key Drugs:
- Dose-dependent: Chemotherapy, chloramphenicol (early, reversible suppression).
- Idiosyncratic: Chloramphenicol (late, irreversible aplasia, fatal), NSAIDs (phenylbutazone), sulfonamides, gold, anticonvulsants (carbamazepine, phenytoin), PTU.
- Clinical: Anemia (fatigue), thrombocytopenia (bleeding), neutropenia (infections).
- Dx: BM biopsy (<25% cellularity, ↑fat).
- Rx: Stop drug, support (transfusions, antibiotics), IST (ATG, cyclosporine), BMT.
- Key Drugs:
-
Agranulocytosis (Severe Neutropenia: ANC < 500/µL)
- Key Drugs: Clozapine, antithyroids (PTU, methimazole), sulfonamides, carbamazepine, ticlopidine, metamizole.
- Clinical: Sudden fever, sore throat, mouth ulcers; sepsis risk.
- Dx: CBC (isolated neutropenia). BM: myeloid arrest/hypocellular.
- Rx: Stop drug, IV antibiotics, G-CSF.
⭐ Clozapine mandates regular ANC monitoring (e.g., weekly for 18 wks) for agranulocytosis risk.
Thrombocytopenia & Hemolytic Anemia - Platelet Plunge & RBC Rupture
Drug-Induced Thrombocytopenia (DITP):
- Mechanism: Immune (drug-dependent Abs).
- Onset: 5-14 days; rapid on re-exposure.
- Key Drugs: Heparin (HIT: ⚠️ paradoxical thrombosis risk!), Quinine, Sulfonamides, Vancomycin, GP IIb/IIIa inhibitors (Abciximab: rapid).
- Features: Bleeding, petechiae.
- Rx: Stop drug. Platelets if severe. HIT: non-heparin anticoagulants.
Drug-Induced Hemolytic Anemia (DIHA):
- Mechanisms:
- Immune: Hapten (Penicillin G), Immune Complex (Quinidine), Autoimmune (Methyldopa).
- Oxidative: Dapsone, Primaquine (G6PD def.).
- Features: Anemia, jaundice, ↑LDH, +ve DAT.
- Rx: Stop drug. Steroids for immune.

⭐ HIT: prothrombotic despite ↓platelets. Suspect if platelet drop >50% or thrombosis 5-14 days post-heparin.
Diagnosis, Management & Prevention - Spotting & Stopping Trouble
- Diagnosis: Key: drug exposure timeline. Bone marrow biopsy if severe/unclear.
- Management: STOP drug immediately! Supportive (transfusions, G-CSF). Immunosuppression for immune cases.
- Prevention: Genetic tests (e.g., G6PD, HLA-B*5701). Monitor high-risk drugs (clozapine, MTX). Patient education.
⭐ Clozapine mandates regular WBC monitoring due to high risk of agranulocytosis.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Aplastic anemia: Key offending drugs include chloramphenicol, gold salts, carbamazepine, and NSAIDs.
- Agranulocytosis: Strongly associated with clozapine, thiouracils (e.g., propylthiouracil), and sulfonamides.
- Megaloblastic anemia: Caused by methotrexate, phenytoin, trimethoprim due to folate antagonism or impaired absorption.
- Hemolytic anemia: Especially in G6PD deficiency, triggered by sulfonamides, dapsone, primaquine, nitrofurantoin.
- Thrombocytopenia: Heparin (HIT) is critical; also quinidine, sulfonamides, valproic acid.
- Drug-induced lupus (procainamide, hydralazine, isoniazid) can present with pancytopenia.
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