Haem: Myeloproliferative Disorders Pt.2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is essential thrombocythaemia?

A

Myeloproliferative disorder mainly involving the megakaryocyte lineage (platelet count > 600 x 109/L)

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2
Q

Describe the typical clinical presentation of essential thrombocythaemia.

A
  • Incidental finding
  • Thrombosis (e.g. CVA, DVT, gangrene)
  • Bleeding
  • Headaches, dizziness and visual disturbances
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3
Q

What proportion of essential thrombocythaemia patients have JAK 2 mutations?

A

50%

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4
Q

Outline the treatment options for essential thrombocythaemia.

A
  • Aspirin
  • Anagrelide (specific inhibitor of platelet formation - may accelerate myelofibrosis)
  • Hydroxycarbamide (MAIN TREATMENT - may be leukaemogenic)
  • Alpha-interferon (may be used in patients < 40 years)
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5
Q

What factor is important in determining risk level in patients with essential thrombocythaemia?

A

Age (old age = higher risk)

Also platelet count and whether symptomatic or not

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6
Q

Describe the prognosis of essential thrombocythaemia.

A
  • Normal life span
  • Leukaemic transformation in about 5% of patients after 10 years
  • Myelofibrosis is uncommon
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7
Q

Define chronic idiopathic myelofibrosis.

A

A clonal myeloproliferative disease with proliferation mainly of megakaryocytes and granulocytic cells, associated with reactive bone marrow fibrosis and extramedullary haemopoesis

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8
Q

Describe the typical clinical presentation of myelofibrosis.

A
  • Incidental finding
  • Cytopaenias
  • Thrombocytosis
  • Splenomegaly (can be MASSIVE)
  • Hepatomegaly
  • FLAWS
  • Gout
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9
Q

Describe the two stages of myelofibrosis.

A
  • Pre-fibrotic = blood changes are mild with hypercellular marrow
  • Fibrotic = splenomegaly, blood changes, dry tap, prominent fibrosis and later osteosclerosis
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10
Q

Describe the appearance of myelofibrosis on a blood film.

A
  • Leukoerythroblastic picture
  • Tear drop poikilocytes
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11
Q

What are some features of the bone marrow in myelofibrosis?

A
  • Dry tap
  • Trephine biopsy will show increased reticulin or collagen fibrosis, prominent megakaryocyte hyperplasia and new bone formation
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12
Q

Outline the treamtent options for myelofibrosis.

A
  • Symptomatic treatment (e.g. transfusions for anaemia)
  • Splenectomy
  • Cytoreductive therapy (hydroxycarbamide and thalidomide)
  • Bone marrow transplant (in younger patients)
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13
Q

Describe the prognosis of myelofibrosis.

A

Median 3-5 year survival

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14
Q

Describe the structure of janus kinases.

A

They have a kinase domain and a catalytically inactive pseudokinase domain with regulatory function

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15
Q

What effect does the JAK 2 V617F mutation have on janus kinases?

A

It inactivates the pseudokinase domain thereby removing inhibition of activation so it becomes constitutively activated.

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16
Q

Which mutations, other than JAK 2 V617F, have been associated with myeloproliferative diseases?

A
  • Exon 12 mutation of the JAK2 gene
  • Mutations in thrombopoietin receptors

NOTE: many patients have NO known mutations

17
Q

Describe the use of bone marrow examination in:

  1. Polycythaemia vera
  2. Essential thrombocythaemia
  3. Myelofibrosis
A
  1. Polycythaemia vera - not needed in PV with JAK 2 mutations
  2. Essential thrombocythaemia - may be helpful if JAK 2 negative
  3. Myelofibrosis - always needed