Cold agglutinin disease (CAD) is a rare autoimmune hemolytic anemia characterized by complement-mediated extravascular hemolysis. The introduction of complement inhibitors, particularly sutimlimab, has significantly improved disease control. However, a subset of patients remains refractory to treatment, particularly those with inadequate bone marrow compensatory response to hemolysis, as well as those rare cases with hypersplenism. We report the case of a woman with refractory CAD who received multiple lines of therapy, including rituximab, bendamustine, sutimlimab, and pegcetacoplan, with suboptimal or transient responses. The clinical course was complicated by progressive splenomegaly and worsening cytopenias consistent with hypersplenism. Splenectomy was eventually performed, followed by re-initiation of sutimlimab. This combined intervention led to marked hematologic improvement, with resolution of anemia and thrombocytopenia, and sustained clinical response. While current guidelines do not recommend splenectomy in CAD due to the hepatic predominance of hemolysis, this case underscores the potential role of the spleen as a modifier of treatment resistance in selected cases. We discuss emerging literature on hypersplenism-associated refractoriness and emphasizes the importance of individualized treatment strategies in the management of complex or refractory CAD phenotypes. Given the rarity of CAD complicated by hypersplenism, large prospective trials may be difficult to conduct. Collaborative multicenter registries and prospective observational studies may represent more feasible approaches to define clinical and molecular predictors of response and to guide personalized therapeutic strategies in challenging subsets.
Case Report: Refractory cold agglutinin disease with hypersplenism: efficacy of splenectomy in a patient treated with sutimlimab / A. Sau, D. Onofrillo, A.C. Russo, G. Di Prinzio, A.M. Quaglietta, M. Di Ianni, B. Fattizzo. - In: FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY. - ISSN 1664-3224. - 17:(2026 Mar 30), pp. 1770676.1-1770676.6. [10.3389/fimmu.2026.1770676]
Case Report: Refractory cold agglutinin disease with hypersplenism: efficacy of splenectomy in a patient treated with sutimlimab
B. FattizzoUltimo
2026
Abstract
Cold agglutinin disease (CAD) is a rare autoimmune hemolytic anemia characterized by complement-mediated extravascular hemolysis. The introduction of complement inhibitors, particularly sutimlimab, has significantly improved disease control. However, a subset of patients remains refractory to treatment, particularly those with inadequate bone marrow compensatory response to hemolysis, as well as those rare cases with hypersplenism. We report the case of a woman with refractory CAD who received multiple lines of therapy, including rituximab, bendamustine, sutimlimab, and pegcetacoplan, with suboptimal or transient responses. The clinical course was complicated by progressive splenomegaly and worsening cytopenias consistent with hypersplenism. Splenectomy was eventually performed, followed by re-initiation of sutimlimab. This combined intervention led to marked hematologic improvement, with resolution of anemia and thrombocytopenia, and sustained clinical response. While current guidelines do not recommend splenectomy in CAD due to the hepatic predominance of hemolysis, this case underscores the potential role of the spleen as a modifier of treatment resistance in selected cases. We discuss emerging literature on hypersplenism-associated refractoriness and emphasizes the importance of individualized treatment strategies in the management of complex or refractory CAD phenotypes. Given the rarity of CAD complicated by hypersplenism, large prospective trials may be difficult to conduct. Collaborative multicenter registries and prospective observational studies may represent more feasible approaches to define clinical and molecular predictors of response and to guide personalized therapeutic strategies in challenging subsets.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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