Case Presentation
A 24-year-old active-duty female patient presented in late December 2020 to a theater hospital in Djibouti after a witnessed syncopal episode. She had a history of Hashimoto thyroiditis and was taking levothyroxine sodium 75 mcg daily. The patient reported gluten intolerance, which was never formally evaluated. The syncopal episode lasted a few seconds and was not associated with any prodromal or postictal symptoms. No seizure activity was observed, and she had no history of syncopal episodes. She reported that she had been feeling ill 24 to 48 hours prior, with nausea, fatigue, decreased oral intake, decreased urine output, and 2 episodes of nonbilious, nonbloody emesis.
When the patient arrived, she was tachycardic with heart rate in the 130s beats per minute (baseline, 100-110 beats per minute), febrile (103 °F), and had systolic blood pressure (SBP) in the low 100s (baseline, SBP 120s-130s). An electrocardiogram and chest radiographs were unremarkable. Her complete blood count (CBC) could not be processed due to Hb and platelet levels too low to detect on assay (Table 2). Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) was elevated at > 1000 U/L with mild elevation in liver enzymes (aspartate aminotransferase, 98 U/L; alanine aminotransferase, 51 U/L) and prolonged partial thromboplastin time 70 seconds. She did not report any increased bleeding or bruising. The peripheral blood smear demonstrated pancytopenia, without any schistocytes, and she was started on broad-spectrum antibiotics for presumed sepsis from urinary source and possible TTP.
The patient received 5 units of packed red blood cells, transfusion of platelets, and 2 doses of vitamin B12 in Djibouti with clinical improvement and resolution of orthostasis, hypotension, tachycardia, and fever. Her final posttransfusion CBC showed a Hb level of 11.2 g/dL, white blood cell (WBC) count of 1.7 K/µL, and platelet count of 23 K/µL (Table 3). Two days later her Hb level was 9.0 g/dL, WBC count 1.8 K/µL, and platelet count was 12 K/µL. She was evacuated via air to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center (LRMC) in Germany within 48 hours of presentation, given limited testing capabilities and persistent anemia and thrombocytopenia, refractory to transfusion, concerning for aplastic anemia or acute leukemia.
On arrival at LRMC, she was transfused 1 unit of platelets and given 3 doses of intramuscular vitamin B12 for undetectable levels (< 50 pg/mL) at presentation. An extensive infectious workup was obtained, which did not reveal any viral, bacterial, or parasitic causes. The patient also had a bone marrow biopsy performed at a civilian site, which revealed hypocellular bone marrow. She was transferred to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center (WRNMMC) for further workup and evaluation, given the infectious workup, which was negative. Concern for hematologic malignancy remained. At the time of her arrival, the laboratory values had drastically improved with vitamin supplementation. The patient’s absolute reticulocyte count indicated adequate bone marrow response and because of her improvement, a repeat bone marrow biopsy was not performed.
Intrinsic factor antibodies were elevated (34.5 AU/mL; reference range, 0.0-1.1), which confirmed that this patient’s underlying etiology was secondary to pernicious anemia. The patient continued to improve and repeat vitamin B12 and folate levels revealed that she was responding to therapy. At discharge, intramuscular vitamin B12 injections were planned to continue monthly, indefinitely per guidelines. Oral supplementation is typically avoided due to poor absorption.
Of note, during her inpatient admission at WRNMMC, further evaluation of reported gluten intolerance was performed, which revealed a negative celiac disease panel (IgG/IgA tissue transglutaminase antibodies). On discharge, she was to establish care with gastroenterology for further evaluation, likely including endoscopic evaluation, at her next duty station. She was able to resume full travel and duty functions on discharge from WRNMMC.