Initial Treatment for Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP)
Corticosteroids are the standard first-line treatment for adults with newly diagnosed ITP requiring therapy, with high-dose dexamethasone (40 mg/day for 4 days) preferred over prednisone when rapid platelet response is needed or in patients with active bleeding. 1
When to Initiate Treatment
Treatment decisions should be based on bleeding risk, not platelet count alone:
- Treat when platelet count is <20-30 × 10⁹/L, particularly if bleeding symptoms are present 1
- Treatment is rarely needed if platelet count >50 × 10⁹/L unless the patient has active bleeding, requires surgery, has comorbidities predisposing to bleeding, or needs anticoagulation 1
- Immediate treatment is mandatory for patients with active CNS, GI, or genitourinary bleeding, or those requiring urgent surgery 1
First-Line Corticosteroid Options
High-Dose Dexamethasone (Preferred for Rapid Response)
- Dosing: 40 mg/day for 4 days, repeated every 2-4 weeks for 1-4 cycles 1, 2
- Initial response rate: Up to 90% of patients 1, 2
- Sustained response rate: 50-80% with 3-6 cycles 1, 2
- Time to response: Several days to several weeks, but faster than prednisone 1, 3
- Advantages: Works faster in increasing platelet counts and appears to reduce severe adverse events compared to prednisone 3
Standard Prednisone
- Dosing: 0.5-2 mg/kg/day (most commonly 1 mg/kg/day) 1
- Initial response rate: 70-80% of patients 1
- Sustained long-term response: Only 20-40% after discontinuation 1
- Tapering: Rapidly taper and discontinue after achieving target platelet count of 30-50 × 10⁹/L 2
Critical Distinction
Dexamethasone is superior for patients with low platelet counts and bleeding diathesis due to faster action, though curative superiority compared to prednisone is not well demonstrated 3. The shorter treatment duration with dexamethasone results in lower incidence of adverse events 3.
Alternative First-Line Options for Specific Situations
Intravenous Immunoglobulin (IVIg)
- Use when: Rapid platelet increase is required (achieves increase within 24 hours) 1
- Dosing: 0.4 g/kg/day for 5 days OR 1 g/kg/day for 1-2 days 1, 4
- Can be combined with corticosteroids for enhanced response and reduced infusion reactions 1
- Particularly useful before planned procedures requiring immediate platelet elevation 5
Anti-D Immunoglobulin
- Dosing: 50-75 μg/kg 1, 4
- Only for: Rh(D)-positive, non-splenectomized patients 1
- Provides predictable, transient platelet increases 1
Corticosteroid Side Effects to Monitor
Short-term (during initial treatment)
- Mood swings, anger, anxiety, insomnia 1, 2
- Weight gain and fluid retention 1, 2
- Cushingoid features 1, 2
- Hyperglycemia and diabetes 1, 2
Long-term (if treatment extends beyond 6-8 weeks)
- Osteoporosis and avascular necrosis 1, 2
- Hypertension 1, 2
- Skin changes and cataracts 1, 2
- Immunosuppression with opportunistic infections 1, 2
Critical Treatment Pitfalls to Avoid
Never continue corticosteroids beyond 6-8 weeks due to substantial morbidity including osteoporosis, diabetes, hypertension, avascular necrosis, and opportunistic infections 2. The American Society of Hematology strongly recommends against prolonged courses 2.
If patients require on-demand administration of corticosteroids after completing first-line treatment, consider them non-responders and promptly switch to second-line therapy 4.
Special Populations
Pregnant Patients
- Either corticosteroids or IVIg can be used as first-line treatment 1
- Mode of delivery should be based on obstetric indications, not platelet count 1
HIV-Associated ITP
- Treat HIV infection with antivirals first unless significant bleeding is present 1
HCV-Associated ITP
When to Consider Second-Line Therapy
If patients fail initial corticosteroid therapy or require ongoing treatment beyond 6-8 weeks 1:
- Thrombopoietin receptor agonists (TPO-RAs) are increasingly preferred before splenectomy due to high response rates and potential for remission 1
- Splenectomy remains highly effective with 80% initial response and 60-65% long-term response 1
Enhanced First-Line Option for Younger Women
Dexamethasone in combination with rituximab in first-line treatment produces higher response rates with better long-term results compared to high-dose dexamethasone alone and is a particularly good option in younger women 3.