Rare Blood Diseases the Focus of AVAHO Virtual Session
AVAHO president hopes free event will prompt new hematology pathways
The Association of Veterans Affairs Hematology/Oncology (AVAHO) will provide more than education during a special virtual session on July 18 devoted to 4 rare and ultra-rare disorders in classical hematology. The program includes 2.25 free continuing education credits and the organization hopes it will spur hematology pathways within the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) National Oncology Program, according to AVAHO President Nicholas Burwick, MD.
“Guidance on hematology disorders lag far behind oncologic disorders at the national level,” said Burwick, who specializes in hematology and bone marrow transplant at the Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System in Seattle.
“Providers are facing real diagnostic and treatment decisions, and there are more and more treatment options available, some with significant cost implications,” Burwick said.
Burwick He is optimistic the session will have a lasting impact. He expanded on the 4 disorders slated for discussion at the meeting: aplastic anemia, thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP), hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT), and acquired hemophilia A in a discussion with Federal Practitioner. The interview transcript has been edited for length and clarity.
What is aplastic anemia?
Aplastic anemia is a true bone marrow failure. The marrow stops producing cells. At a referral center like Seattle, we might see a few [cases] a year because we also do bone marrow transplant. Most facilities are probably seeing 1 or 2 a year at most.
Different mechanisms are behind it: immune-mediated causes, genetic predispositions, and acquired toxic injury. In the military population, aplastic anemia due to toxic exposure is a significant concern.
Who tends to develop aplastic anemia?
The age spectrum is broader than people think. We do see it in patients in their 40s and 50s, not just seniors. The general rule has been, if a patient is under 40, pursue transplant; over 40, pursue immunosuppressive therapy. However, that cutoff is somewhat arbitrary.
What are some things clinicians should understand about this disease?
Clinicians need to know the diagnostic criteria, what tests to run, how to put in transplant referral requests, and how to get a case on the radar at a transplant center like Nashville or Seattle.
Patients need referral quickly. They often don’t respond to standard treatments like growth factors, so they end up requiring a lot of transfusions. You don’t want to sit around.
Even if the transplant happens outside the VA, it usually runs through a transplant center for review first. There’s also the question of whether a condition qualifies as a service-connected disability or if the diagnosis is a presumptive condition for certain exposures.
How often do you see TTP, which produces small blood clots in blood vessels?
Some clinicians may see 1 case every 3 to 4 years, or possibly 1 case in an entire career. There is an inherited form and an acquired form. We’re primarily focused on the acquired autoimmune form, which can present in young adulthood or later.
What should clinicians know?
These patients come in needing urgent treatment. Recognizing the diagnosis quickly, ordering the right tests, and acting fast are all critical. This can be life-threatening within days without treatment.
Treatment involves plasma exchange, which not every facility is equipped to perform. There are also medications: steroids are standard, but there’s also caplacizumab, which is highly specific to TTP and unlikely to be stocked in a VA pharmacy because of how rarely it’s needed. Pharmacies often have to procure it on demand once the diagnosis is made, which can delay care. A key part of managing these cases is knowing who to reach out to and when to transfer a patient to an academic or community partner that has plasma exchange capability.
Are VA clinicians likely to see HHT, an inherited disorder that causes bleeding due to malformed blood vessels?
There’s a misconception that veterans don’t have inherited bleeding disorders, the assumption being that they wouldn’t have gotten into the military (had they had them). But many of these conditions don’t get diagnosed until later in life: symptoms can be mild initially or not present until young adulthood or later.
Patients might come in with recurrent nosebleeds or unexplained [gastrointestinal] bleeding. We probably all have patients with HHT in our practices without knowing it because we’re not always doing appropriate diagnostic testing.
How are treatments evolving?
Recent developments include both local options like laser treatment and systemic medications such as pomalidomide, which was approved recently, and bevacizumab. [The virtual session] speaker has been involved in clinical trials for pomalidomide and will speak to when to use these medications and how to choose between them now that there are options, both of which are expensive.
What is acquired hemophilia A?
It occurs when someone without a genetic predisposition loses their factor VIII activity due to an autoimmune process. It presents quickly, often with bleeding or bruising, and patients frequently show up in the [emergency department].
The treatment challenge is distinct from inherited hemophilia. Standard factor VIII replacement doesn’t work here because the autoantibody breaks it down. Treatment requires bypassing factor VIII—options include factor VIIa and emicizumab.
Emicizumab is FDA-approved for inherited hemophilia A and used off-label for the acquired form. Procuring it in a VA facility can be difficult, and that is exactly where a VA clinical pathway would help.
The VA doesn’t currently have strong hemophilia expertise internally. So, engaging with hemophilia treatment centers is important, as is developing subject matter experts within VA hematology who can serve as go-to resources for less-resourced facilities.
What unites these 4 rare hematology conditions?
There are common threads: rare presentations requiring urgent decision-making, diagnostic criteria that aren’t always familiar, and treatments that may be hard to procure quickly. VA-specific resources—pathways, referral contacts, teleoncology consults—can make the difference in patient outcomes.
A centralized virtual hematology hub, where providers could reach a knowledgeable hematologist for consultation, would go a long way. That’s what we’re ultimately trying to build toward.
The AVAHO Virtual Session on Rare and Ultra-Rare Hematologic Disorders will be held on July 18, 2026, from 12-2:30 p.m. EST.
The program is available to any health care professional who wants to learn more about the diagnosis and management of these hematologic disorders; 2.25 free continuing education credits are available.
The speakers are:
• Aplastic anemia: Emma Groarke, MB, BCh, BAO, MD, National Institutes of Health
• Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura: Yazan Abou-Ismail, MD, University of Utah
• Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia: Hanny Al-Samkari, MD, Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School; and
• Acquired hemophilia A, Aaron Boothby, MD, University of Washington/Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center.
