Long-term outcomes in adults with chronic ITP after splenectomy failure

Abstract
Adult chronic immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) is an autoimmune disorder manifested by thrombocytopenia from the effects of antiplatelet autoantibodies and T lymphocyte–mediated platelet cytotoxicity. Multiple studies show that corticosteroid treatment and splenectomy, alone or together, increase platelet counts to safe levels in 60% to 70% of patients. However, there is little information on the outcomes of ITP patients refractory to splenectomy. We studied 114 patients with ITP for whom splenectomy failed and who required additional therapy; long-term follow-up was available on 105 (92%) patients. Seventy-five (71.4%) patients attained stable partial (platelet count greater than 30 × 109/L) or complete (normal platelet count) remission; 51 patients remained in remission after therapy was discontinued, whereas 24 patients required continued treatment. Median time to remission after splenectomy failure was 46 months (range, 1-437 months). Median remission durations were 60 months (range, 10-212 months) for patients off therapy and 48 months (range, 2-167 months) for patients on therapy. Thirty (29.6%) patients remained unresponsive to treatment. Thirty-two patients died, 17 (15.7%) of ITP (bleeding, 11 patients; therapy complications, 6 patients) and 15 (13.9%) of unrelated causes. We conclude that most patients with refractory ITP attain stable remission, though on average this occurs slowly. However, a subpopulation with severe, resistant disease experiences significant morbidity and mortality.