Immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP), due to the production of antiplatelet antibodies, is the most prevalent etiology of thrombocytopenia in children and a frequent cause of consultation for the pediatrician. We review here a series of Lebanese pediatric patients presenting with ITP and we discuss the relevant characteristics of the group.
Study: A retrospective chart analysis was performed for 40 hospitalized or out-patient children presenting with ITP between January 1998 and December 2001. All cases except two had a diagnosis confirmed by bone marrow aspirate. Patients were equally distributed between the sexes with a mean age of 56 months. More than half of the patients had an episode of fever 2 days to 8 weeks prior to the diagnosis. For 42% of them, the disease appeared in the months between January and March. Ten percent presented with epistaxis but all of these had a platelet count less than 12,000. One-third of the patients had received immunization 2-8 weeks before the diagnosis, with one patient having a relapse 4 weeks after mumps-measles-rubella (MMR) immunization, which was 1 year after the initial cure. Initial treatment consisted of either steroids or intravenous polyvalent immunoglobulin in 58 and 36% of the cases, respectively. None of the patients had life-threatening hemorrhage. Only 10% of the patients developed chronic ITP (unremitting after 6 months).
Conclusion: ITP is generally a benign disease in infancy and childhood. Certain characteristics of ITP in this series, such as the seasonal variation and the post-vaccine ITP, will need to be better defined in larger prospective studies. Optimal treatment will eventually be targeted towards a better delineation of the disease phenotype.