Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis in adults: collaborative analysis of 137 cases of a nationwide German registry

  • Sebastian Birndt
  • Thomas Schenk
  • Babett Heinevetter
  • Frank M Brunkhorst
  • Georg Maschmeyer
  • Frank Rothmann
  • Thomas Weber
  • Markus Müller
  • Jens Panse
  • Olaf Penack
  • Roland Schroers
  • Jan Braess
  • Norbert Frickhofen
  • Stephan Ehl
  • Gritta Janka
  • Kai Lehmberg
  • Mathias W Pletz
  • Andreas Hochhaus
  • Thomas Ernst
  • Paul La Rosée

Abstract

PURPOSE: Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) is a severe hyperinflammatory syndrome emerging from a deregulated immune response due to various triggers. In adults, systematic data are sparse, which is why recommendations on diagnosis and management have been adopted from pediatric guidelines. A nationwide clinical registry with associated consulting service as collaborative initiative of HLH-specialized pediatricians and hematologists was initiated to better characterize HLH in adults.

METHODS: Patients with proven or suspected HLH were registered by 44 institutions. Both HLH-2004 diagnostic criteria and the HScore (www.saintantoine.aphp.fr/score/) were used to confirm HLH diagnosis. Data referring to underlying disease, treatment, outcome, clinical presentation and laboratory findings were recorded.

RESULTS: The study included 137 patients and provides the first systematic data on adult HLH in Germany. Median age was 50 years with a wide range (17-87 years), 87 patients (63.5%) were male. Most common triggering diseases were infections in 61 patients (44.5%) and malignancies in 48 patients (35%). Virtually all patients had elevated ferritin concentrations, and 74% had peak concentrations greater than 10,000 µg/l. At time of analysis, 67 of 131 patients (51%) had died. Patients with malignancy-associated HLH had the shortest median survival (160 days), however no statistically significant difference between subgroups was observed (p = 0.077). Platelets under 20*109/l and low albumin concentrations (< 20 g/l) were associated with poor overall and 30-day survival.

CONCLUSION: Close multidisciplinary case consultation and cooperation is mandatory when treating adult HLH patients. Early contact with reference centers is recommended, especially in relapsing or refractory disease.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0171-5216
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 04.2020
PubMed 32076823