Gray Platelet Syndrome

Author:  Geoffrey Wool, MD, PhD, 02/09/2018
Category: Platelet and Megakaryocyte Disorders > Hereditary Platelet Disorders > Gray Platelet Syndrome (alpha-granule deficiency, alpha-storage pool disease)
Published Date: 02/09/2018

A 56-year-old female with high grade cervical dysplasia underwent a therapeutic LEEP procedure. Immediately after the procedure hemostasis was achieved, however over the next few days she had repeated re-bleeding at the cervix.  CBC and screening coagulation assay findings were normal.  A peripheral blood smear demonstrated agranular/hypogranular platelets and a lumi-aggregation study demonstrated functional impairment in response to agonists in the arachidonic acid/thromboxane pathway.

Grey platelet syndrome is a rare cause of mild to moderate bleeding tendencies often diagnosed in childhood, but occasionally diagnosed later in life. It is caused by an absence of protein-containing alpha granules in both megakaryocytes and platelets resulting in large, agranular, colorless, poorly functioning platelets [1].  Dense granules (visible by electron microscopy but not light microscopy) are not affected in typical grey platelet syndrome.  Platelet aggregation responses in grey platelet syndrome are variable, with thrombin and/or collagen-induced platelet aggregation being most commonly reported to be abnormal [1].  Grey platelet syndrome is typically caused by NBEAL2 mutation [2-4]. 

Artifactually colorless platelets are rarely seen in “pseudo- gray platelet syndrome” when blood collected in EDTA containing tubes [5]. In pseudo grey-platelet syndrome, some patient’s blood samples undergo in-vitro degranulation of all platelets in response to the EDTA, which is seen peripheral blood smear. It is expected that in such a case the functional platelet aggregation assay, where blood is collected in a citrate tube, will be normal. 

Learning points from the case:

1. Agranular platelet morphology on peripheral blood smear

2. Platelet aggregation defects are seen in grey platelet syndrome

 

References:

1. Nurden, A. T., & Nurden, P. (2007). The gray platelet syndrome: clinical spectrum of the disease. Blood Reviews, 21(1), 21-36.

2. Gunay-Aygun M et al. (2011). NBEAL2 is mutated in gray platelet syndrome and is required for biogenesis of platelet α-granules. Nat Genet. 43(8):732-4.

3. Albers CA et al. (2011). Exome sequencing identifies NBEAL2 as the causative gene for gray platelet syndrome. Nat Genet. 43(8):735-7.

4. Kahr WH et al. (2011). Mutations in NBEAL2, encoding a BEACH protein, cause gray platelet syndrome. Nat Genet. 43(8):738-40.

5. Cockbill SR et al. (1988) Pseudo grey platelet syndrome, grey platelets due to degranulation in blood collected into EDTA. Eur J Haematol. 41:326–333.

6. Kahr WH et al. (2013). Abnormal megakaryocyte development and platelet function in Nbeal2(-/-) mice. Blood. 122(19):3349-58.

Blood smear

The peripheral blood smear in a patient with grey platelet syndrome will demonstrate abnormally large platelets without alpha granules, imparting a colorless “grey” appearance to the platelets. 

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Lumi-aggregation image of GPS case

Severely decreased aggregation and dense granule secretion response to thromboxane A2 analog (U46619) and more mildly decreased response to arachidonic acid (not shown).  Normal aggregation and dense granule secretion response for high-dose ristocetin and convulxin (glycoprotein VI activating venom) demonstrates that gpIb/vWF and collagen receptor pathways are normal.  ADP and thrombin agonist (TRAP) response were normal (not shown).  The mouse NBEAL2 knock-out model of human grey platelet syndrome shows reduced platelet U46619 responsiveness, among other deficiencies [6] 

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