Spotlight on Hematology: Differential Diagnosis of Neutropenia

Julie Allen, BVMS, MS, MRCVS, DACVIM (SAIM), DACVP (Clinical), Durham, North Carolina

ArticleLast Updated May 20191 min readPeer Reviewed
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Following are differential diagnoses, listed in order of likelihood, for patients presented with neutropenia.

  • Increased migration into tissue due to severe inflammation (eg, pneumonia, peritonitis) or acute endotoxemia due to increased margination; can occur within an hour of endotoxin release by gram-negative bacteria

  • Decreased bone marrow production (often in association with other cytopenias) resulting from:

    • Chemotherapeutics

    • Estrogen toxicity (endogenous [eg, Sertoli cell tumor] vs exogenous)

    • Other drugs (eg, potentiated sulfonamides)

    • Myelophthisis

      • Myelofibrosis

      • Neoplasia (eg, lymphoblastic leukemia, multiple myeloma)

    • Bone marrow necrosis (eg, from sepsis, heatstroke, or drugs [eg, phenobarbital, carprofen, metronidazole, cyclophosphamide, colchicine, fenbendazole])

    • Canine parvovirus and feline panleukopenia virus

    • FeLV and FIV

    • Tick-borne disease (eg, Ehrlichia canis, E ewingii, Anaplasma phagocytophilum, babesiosis)

    • Gray collie syndrome (ie, cyclic hematopoiesis)

    • Trapped neutrophil syndrome of border collies

  • Increased neutrophil destruction resulting from:

    • Immune-mediated neutropenia (primary or secondary [eg, to drugs or infection])

    • Hemophagocytic syndrome, often with other cytopenias

    • Histiocytic sarcoma, often with other cytopenias

    • Drugs

    • Toxins

    • Viruses

  • Vitamin B12 deficiency, particularly in border collies, Australian shepherd dogs, giant schnauzers, and beagles

  • Breed-associated cause of unknown mechanism, particularly in Belgian Tervurens and Australian shepherd dogs

  • Idiopathic neutropenia (cats)

Editor’s note: This article was originally published in April 2019 as “Differential Diagnosis: Neutropenia.”