A Case of Piperacillin-Induced Immune Thrombocytopenia: Diagnostic Challenges and Management
Research article published in Cureus (2025)
Abstract
Drug-induced immune thrombocytopenia (DITP) is a rare yet critical disorder that requires prompt recognition and discontinuation of the causative drug to prevent severe complications. In DITP, platelet-reactive antibodies lead to significant platelet destruction. Heparin-induced thrombocytopenia is the most well-studied; yet, antibiotics have also been described. Herein is a case of a 97-year-old woman with a history of hypertension and hyperlipidemia who was admitted with rhabdomyolysis and sepsis secondary to choledocholithiasis and gallstone pancreatitis. She was started on intravenous fluids and broad-spectrum antibiotics, including piperacillin-tazobactam and vancomycin. Within days, her platelet count dropped from 323,000/μL to 1,000/μL. Schistocytes and hemolysis were absent on a peripheral smear. The patient had normal coagulation studies, and she had a low 4T (thrombocytopenia, timing of platelet count fall, thrombosis or other sequelae, and other causes for thrombocytopenia) score, ruling out thrombotic microangiopathies, such as disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP), and heparin-induced thrombocytopenia (HIT), respectively. While immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) was seriously considered, the temporal relationship between the drop in platelet count and the administration of broad-spectrum antibiotics led to greater suspicion of DITP. Piperacillin was suspected to be the cause and was promptly discontinued. The suspicion was subsequently confirmed, as supported by the detection of positive drug-dependent IgG antibodies. The patient's platelet count normalized within a week after stopping piperacillin and receiving IV immunoglobulin (1 g/kg). Hence, DITP needs to be considered among other causes in patients with acute severe thrombocytopenia, as early recognition and prompt cessation of the offending agent are important for preventing life-threatening hemorrhagic sequelae.
Abstract sourced from PubMed (NCBI) for the cited record. See the original publication for the authoritative version.
Summary
Peer-reviewed clinical and outcomes research relevant to anticoagulation, leech therapy, and microsurgical flap management. Indexed in PubMed and verified against the NCBI record.
Why This Matters for Hirudotherapy
This case report describes drug-induced immune thrombocytopenia (DITP) in a 97-year-old woman whose platelet count fell sharply during broad-spectrum antibiotics, with piperacillin identified as the trigger (confirmed by drug-dependent IgG antibodies) and recovery after stopping the drug and giving IV immunoglobulin; the abstract notes HIT as the best-studied form of antibody-mediated thrombocytopenia. The connection to hirudotherapy is only peripheral: it concerns antibiotic-induced, not leech- or anticoagulant-related, thrombocytopenia, and serves mainly as part of the differential-diagnosis landscape around drug-induced low platelets. Caveat: this is a single antibiotic-associated case with no relationship to the medicinal leech or hirudin, and should not be read as hirudotherapy evidence.
Citation
A Case of Piperacillin-Induced Immune Thrombocytopenia: Diagnostic Challenges and Management.
Patel et al. · Cureus, 2025
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