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By
From the Blood Research Institute, The Blood Center of Southeastern Wisconsin Inc, Milwaukee; and the Departments of Medicine and Pathology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI.
A 75-year-old woman taking the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug diclofenac (DCF ) presented with acute Coombs-positive hemolytic anemia and subsequently developed renal failure. A drug-dependent antibody specific for red blood cells (RBCs) could not be demonstrated by in vitro testing with DCF. However, her serum was found to contain an IgM antibody that reacted strongly with RBCs in the presence of urine from any of four subjects who had ingested DCF. The active substance in urine was isolated, subjected to high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) analysis, and found to be a glucuronide conjugate of a known DCF metabolite, 4'-hydroxydiclofenac (4'-OH DCF ). Negative results were obtained with four other DCF metabolites. Two 4'-OH DCF glucuronides were synthesized in vitro using a liver microsomal system. One promoted agglutination of normal RBCs by the patient's serum and was identified as the glucuronide ester of 4'-OH DCF by proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analysis. Studies with a panel of RBCs showed that the patient's antibody reacted preferentially with the e antigen of the Rh system. Acute immune hemolytic anemia in this patient appears to have been caused by sensitization to DCF modified by 4' hydroxylation and glucuronidation. This is the first reported example of immune cytopenia caused by sensitivity to a glucuronide conjugate of a drug metabolite. Since glucuronidation is a common pathway of drug metabolism, studies of the frequency with which glucuronide derivatives of primary medications cause immune cytopenia seem warranted.
MANY DIFFERENT DRUGS are capable of inducing immune hemolytic anemia.1-3 The underlying pathogenesis of this side effect of drug treatment is not fully understood, but at least three different mechanisms appear to be involved.3,4 Some drugs, such as methyldopa and procainamide, induce autoantibodies that bind to red blood cells (RBCs) in the absence of drug and may perpetuate hemolysis for a period after the drug is discontinued.2,3 Others such as penicillin and cephalothin bind covalently to cell membrane proteins and act as haptens to induce antibodies specific for the drug-protein complex.3-5 Hemolysis caused by these two mechanisms is usually mild and may even be subclinical.
A third type of drug-induced immune hemolysis, usually more severe and sometimes fatal, is characterized by antibodies that bind to normal erythrocytes only when the sensitizing drug is present in the fluid phase.3,6 At one time, it was thought that this type of antibody reacts with its cellular target(s) in the form of "immune complexes" consisting of antibody bound to the drug or to drug-protein complexes.2,7 However, the putative immune complexes have never been convincingly demonstrated, and it is now generally thought that the provocative drugs interact noncovalently with certain membrane proteins to form combinatorial epitopes or induce conformational changes for which the antibodies are specific.3,8 This type of antibody can sometimes be identified by showing that it binds to RBCs in the presence of the sensitizing drug,1,3 but negative results are often obtained.1,7 In several studies, positive reactions were obtained using serum9,10 or urine11 from a person taking the implicated medication as the source of "drug." These observations suggested that drug metabolites may be important in pathogenesis and provided a potential explanation for the failure in some cases to detect antibodies using the primary medication.
Diclofenac (DCF ), a widely used nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, is one of the medications implicated as a cause of immune hemolytic anemia.11-13 In one instance, it was found that the patient's serum contained Igs that reacted with normal RBCs in the presence of urine from an individual taking DCF, but the active substance, presumably a DCF metabolite, was not identified.11 We recently encountered a patient who developed severe immune hemolytic anemia while taking DCF. No drug-dependent antibodies could be demonstrated using DCF, but the patient's serum contained antibodies that reacted with normal RBCs in the presence of urine containing DCF metabolites. Because little is known about the structural properties of metabolites that may cause this type of drug sensitivity, we performed further studies to characterize the substance responsible.
Case Report
Reagents
Serologic Studies Agglutination. Twenty microliters of patient serum was added to 20 µL of a 4% suspension of washed group O RBCs in phosphate-buffered (0.01 mol/L) isotonic saline (PBS), pH 7.4, and 20 µL PBS containing 1% BSA (PBS-BSA) with or without drug at a concentration of 1.0 mg/mL. In some studies, 20 µL urine neutralized to pH 7.0 was added as the source of "drug." The mixture was incubated at room temperature for 30 minutes, RBCs were sedimented by rapid centrifugation and gently resuspended by shaking, and agglutination was graded (0 to 4+) by inspection. An agglutination score was also assigned.14 The mixture was then washed four times with PBS-BSA containing drug at the same concentration as the primary mixture or urine diluted 1:10 in PBS-BSA. After the fourth wash, an antiglobulin test was performed using a reagent specific for human IgG heavy and light chains (Immucor Inc, Norcross, GA).Preparation of Rat Liver Microsomes Fractions containing microsomes were isolated from the livers of Sprague-Dawley rats as described by Radominski-Pyrek et al.15 All procedures were performed between 0° and 4°C. Frozen rat livers were thawed at 4°C in homogenizing buffer (0.25 mol/L sucrose, 1 mmol/L EDTA, 5 mmol/L Tris, pH 7.6). Each liver was blotted dry and weighed in 10 mL cold homogenizing buffer. The volume of buffer was adjusted to four times the weight of the livers, and they were minced and homogenized separately. The pooled homogenates were centrifuged at 5,000g for 15 minutes. The supernatants were collected and centrifuged at 17,000g for 30 minutes. The supernatants were again collected, and their content of microsomes was pelleted at 100,000g for 1 hour. The pelleted microsomes were washed once in cold homogenizing buffer and resuspended in 1 mL storage solution (0.25 mol/L sucrose and 5 mmol/L Tris, pH 7.5) for each liver. Aliquots were then frozen at -80°C until used. On average, the microsomal preparations contained 40 mg protein/mL determined by the bicinchoninic acid method.16Microsomal Glucuronidation of DCF and 4' Hydroxydiclofenac Rat liver microsomes (0.1 mL containing 4 mg protein) were added to 0.25 mL Tris buffer (200 mmol/L Tris and 20 mmol/L MgCl2 , pH 7.4) and 0.1 mL of a solution containing DCF or 4' hydroxydiclofenac (4'-OH DCF ) (1 mg/mL in 5% BSA with 25 mmol/L D-saccharic 1,4 lactone). After a 15-minute preincubation at 37°C, 50 µL 30-mmol/L solution of UDPGA in water was added. Aliquots (50 µL) were removed immediately and at various times thereafter and were added to 100 µL acetonitrile. After centrifugation to remove protein, the supernatants were stored at -20°C pending HPLC analysis.HPLC Analysis A Beckman system gold model 126 pump and 167 variable-wavelength dual-channel detector set at 254 and 275 nm were used. A 5-µm C18 guard column from Vydac (Hesperia, CA) was used as the precolumn. The column was a 5-µm C18 column (4.6 mm × 250 mm), also from Vydac. Solvent A consisted of 0.1% TFA in deionized distilled water. Solvent B consisted of 0.08% TFA in HPLC-grade acetonitrile. The flow rate was 1 mL/min. The program for a 30-minute procedure was as follows: 2 minutes at isocratic conditions using 95% solvent A and 5% solvent B; a linear gradient over the next 20 minutes to a mixture of 15% solvent A and 85% solvent B; and an isocratic flush at 5% solvent A and 95% solvent B for 3 minutes. The program ended with a 5-minute re-equilibration at 95% solvent A and 5% solvent B. Peaks of interest were collected, frozen at -80°C, and lyophilized.Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Analysis Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra were analyzed on a Bruker (Billerica, MA) AC 300, 300-MHz device using samples dissolved in dimethylsulfoxide-d6.Isolation of DCF Metabolites From Urine Urinary metabolites were isolated by passing 15 mL of a 24-hour urine collection from an individual taking DCF (75 mg three times daily) through a 600-mg Maxi-clean solid-phase (C18) extraction cartridge (Alltech, Deerfield, IL). The cartridge was first prepared by washing with acetonitrile and then with water. After the urine was passed through the cartridge, it was washed with 5% acetonitrile in water. Urinary metabolites were then extracted with 4 mL acetonitrile. The effluent was frozen at -80°C and lyophilized. The residue was reconstituted in PBS-BSA for serologic testing and HPLC analysis.
An IgM antibody that required a presumptive DCF metabolite for binding to RBCs was identified in the patient's serum. The patient's serum obtained shortly after admission to the hospital reacted weakly with normal RBCs in the indirect antiglobulin test. An acid eluate (Elu-kit; Gamma Biologicals, Houston, TX) prepared from the patient's RBCs showed negative reactions. No reaction of the serum or eluate with RBCs in the presence of DCF at a concentration as high as 1 mg/mL could be demonstrated. Negative reactions were also obtained with thyroxine and diltiazem. However, strong positive agglutination reactions were obtained using urine from four different individuals who were taking DCF as the source of "drug" in the reaction mixture. Negative reactions were obtained with urine from three persons not taking DCF (Table 1). The strength of these reactions was not increased by antiglobulin testing, and they were abolished by pretreatment of serum with 2-mercaptoethanol (data not shown). By flow cytometry, it was found that the presumptive drug-dependent antibody was of the IgM class (Fig 1). RBCs pretreated with DCF or with urine containing DCF metabolites and then washed failed to react with the patient's serum. These findings suggested that the serum contained an IgM antibody that required a metabolite of DCF present in urine for its reaction with RBCs.
Our patient developed antibody-mediated hemolysis that led to acute renal failure while taking the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug DCF. With supportive care and discontinuation of DCF, she recovered in about 4 weeks. Her course was typical of the more severe (third) type of drug-induced immune hemolytic anemia (see Introduction). The finding of an IgM antibody in her serum that bound to RBCs only in the presence of the 4' hydroxylated glucuronide ester of DCF provides strong evidence that the hemolysis was a result of sensitivity to this DCF metabolite.
While this manuscript was under review, Salama A, et al (Br J Haematol 95:640, 1996) reported 15 additional cases of immune hemolytic anemia related to diclofenac (17 total including 2 cases from ref 11). Of the 17 patient samples, 13 reacted with DCF urine, DCF, and DCF-treated RBCs. Four reacted only with DCF urine.
Submitted October 31, 1996;
accepted February 20, 1997.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page
charge payment. This article must therefore be hearly marked
``advertisment'' in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section 1734 solely to
indicate this fact. We are indebted to Frank Laib, Department of Biochemistry, Medical College of Wisconsin, for assistance with NMR studies; to Dr Richard Mansfield, Dr Edward Barylak, and Ellen Heim, Holy Family Memorial Medical Center, Manitowoc, WI, for referral of the patient for study; and to the Word Processing Department of The Blood Center of Southeastern Wisconsin for manuscript preparation.
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