[A patient with AL amyloidosis and severe factor X deficiency has been in complete haematological remission with normal factor X activity for 7 years following high-dose chemotherapy. A case study and literature review]
- PMID: 20184115
[A patient with AL amyloidosis and severe factor X deficiency has been in complete haematological remission with normal factor X activity for 7 years following high-dose chemotherapy. A case study and literature review]
Abstract
Disturbance of haemostasis and bleeding are rather frequent complications of AL amyloidosis. These are frequently caused by increased fragility of capillaries, thrombocyte function disorders and coagulation cascade defects. The most frequent coagulation disorder is decreased factor X activity. We describe a 34-year old female after hysterectomy for myomatous uterus and metrorhagia. Before the surgery, the attending physicians did not identify any pathological changes suggesting a need for further investigations or presence of AL amyloidosis. Post-surgery development was complicated by life-threatening diffuse haemorrhage. Extended investigations of coagulation cascade revealed reduction of factor X activity to 16%. Targeted histological examination of the resected uterus confirmed AL amyloid deposits consisting of kappa chains. The patient's bone marrow contained certain small level of multiplied kappa chains-expressing plasma cells (< 10%); monoclonal immunoglobulins IgG K and free kappa chains were identified in serum. At that time, the patient did not satisfy the then valid Durie-Salmon criteria for multiple myeloma and thus the patient was diagnosed with primary systemic AL amyloidosis. The patient's condition gradually improved following substitution therapy (Prothromplex, fresh frozen plasma and erythrocyte transfusion) and bleeding slowly ceased so that chemotherapy with VAD (vincristine, adriamycin and dexamethasone) was initiated 6 weeks after the surgery. A total of 8 chemotherapy cycles were administered and complete haematological remission was achieved after the 5th cycle. Administration of the 8 VAD chemotherapy cycles resulted in increased factor X activity; bleeding complications subsided completely, thereby decreasing the risk of life-threatening mucositis-associated haemorrhage. Consequently, tandem high-dose chemotherapy (melphalan 100 mg/m2) with autologous haematopoietic stem cells transplantation was added to the treatment plan. Treatment was completed at the beginning of 2003 and, from that time, the patient is on continuous maintenance therapy with interferon alpha. Seven years from the diagnosis and 6 years from the completion of treatment the patient is in complete haematological remission, with no signs of organic damage caused by AL amyloid and with normal factor X activity. Factor X activity increased at the time when complete haematological remission was achieved after 8 cycles of VAD chemotherapy to 42%, it reached 68% the second year following high-dose chemotherapy, 77% after 5 years and 85% after 7 years. We had considered administration of high-dose chemotherapy in the standard regimen, i.e. following 4 cycles of VAD chemotherapy, as too high risk in the described young female patient. Therefore, we administered 8 cycles of conventional chemotherapy and only after complete haematological remission and partial organ response (factor X activity increased to 42%) were achieved, we added tandem high-dose chemotherapy to the treatment. We thus achieved long-term (7-years so far) complete haematological and organ remission. Increase in factor X activity is explicit over the entire 7-year observational period. We recommend starting treatment of high-risk transplant patients with AL amyloidosis with traditional chemotherapy regimen and, in case of positive haematological and organ treatment response, we recommend re-examination of potential benefits and risks of high-dose chemotherapy with autologous transplantation.
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