Myelodysplastic Syndromes and Myeloproliferative Disorders - Lecture Flashcards
Myelodysplastic syndromes - general considerations
Disorders of the pluripotential stem cell
Characterized by ineffective hematopoiesis:
Proliferative defects
Differentiation abnormalities
Impaired apoptosis
Clinical picture…pancytopenia with hyperplastic marrow
Potential risk for development of acute leukemia
Causes of Myelodysplastic syndrome
Chemo - breast, HL, NHL, acute leukemia
Alkylating agents—cyclophosphamide, ifosfamide, cisplatin, carboplatin, nitrogen mustard
Anthracycline antibiotics—Adriamycin, daunorubicin, epirubicin
Radiation - atomic bomb blast survivors, nuclear accidents, therapeutic
Petrochemical exposure
Myelodysplastic syndrome: incidence and cytogenics (aka immunophenotype)
Mostly elderly (6th and 7th decade) Men and women equally affected
Partial or total loss of long arm of chromosome 5 or 7
Inversion of chromosome 16
Trisomy 8
Clinical presentation of myelodyplasic syndrome
Constitutional symptoms—half are asymptomatic Fatigue Pallor Bleeding Infection Pancytopenia
Labs: elevated serum LDH, iron overload: increased serum ferritin but serum Fe and TIBC normal
Refractory anemia with ringed sideroblasts (RARS)
Similarities to RA
Ringed sideroblasts in marrow precursors
Mitochondria laden with Fe encircling the nucleus of the erythroid precursors
No clear explanation for cause
Lowest risk of conversion to AML (10- 15%)
Pyridoxine deficiency: causes ringed sideroblasts in marrow - replace B6 for 6 mo then repeat marrow - if no improvement - pyridoxine resistant sideroblastic anemia (RARS)
Clinical course of myelodysplastic syndrome
Poor prognosis - median survival 2 years, variable course
Adverse prognostic features: Marrow blasts >5% Platelets less than 100,000/uL Hb less than 10g/dl Neutrophils less than 2500/uL Age > 60 yo
Poor prognosis:
Monosomy 7
Hypodiploidy
multiple abnormalities
Favorable:
5q- syndrome - beneficial responses to lenalidoamide
Treatment of Myelodysplastic syndrome - supportive care
Supportive care:
Avoid medications that damage marrow
Aggressive treatment of infections
Transfuse PRBCs when symptomatic
Transfuse platelets only for bleeding or in preparation for surgery
Watch for iron overload-desferrioxamine (Desferal) or deferasirox (Exjade) if present
Hematinics
Supplemental vitamins not needed if chemical assays normal
B6 may be exception-trial of pyridoxine 100 mg/d for minimum of 6 months has been effective in some
Erythropoietin
May decrease or ameliorate transfusion requirement in some Serum EPO level > 500 predicts for poor response
Androgens
Variably effective and lots of side effects
Subset of patients with hypoplastic marrow may benefit
Reasonable to try if no other options exist
Corticosteroids
No beneficial effect and significant toxicity
Treatment of Myelodysplastic syndrome - Low/Intermediate intensity therapy
Hypomethylating agents—azacitidine, decitabine cause hypomethylation (demethylation) of DNA and direct cytotoxicity on abnormal bone marrow hematopoietic cells
Lenalidomide—angiogenesis inhibitor for use in 5q- syndrome only
Treatment of Myelodysplastic syndrome - high intensity therapy
AML induction-style treatment
Not as effective as de novo AML
Response rate=54% with 15% mortality rate at 30 days
Medial survival 13-15 months
Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
considered with MDS under 60 yo and have an HLA-matched sibling donor
significant chance of cure after allo-HCT in low and intermediate risk patients, transplant-related mortality and the relapse rate at five years are as high as 40%
Myelofibrosis pathogenesis and presentation
triad: leukoerythroblastic anemia, poikilocytosis, splenomegaly
Increased reticulin deposition in marrow
Suspected to be 2ndary to increased platelet derived growth factor (PDGF) and other cytokines in marrow
Increased marrow megakaryocytes can be seen
Chronic stimulus to marrow fibroblasts that then make reticulin
Marrow architecture disrupted with subsequent mobilization of marrow stem cells to extramedullary sites (spleen, liver, lungs)
JAK2 mutations 45-65%, can be JAK -
Myelofibrosis prognosis and treatment
Usually chronic but progressive
asymptomatic for years
Progressive pancytopenia and organomegaly indicate development of later stages of disease
Symptomatic its survive 1 year
Aloo-Stem cell transplant only curative tx
Tx:
Observation if asymptomatic
No therapy available for reversal of fibrosis
Some patients have been treated with BMT
Pancytopenia
Manage anemia with transfusion
EPO if serum EPO level less than 500 Transfuse platelets if bleeding occurs
Growth factors for neutropenia
Treat infections aggressively
-Overwhelming infection most common cause of death
Splenomegaly
Hydroxyurea variably effective-may be overly myelosuppressive
Radiation also helpful in some
In severe cases, splenectomy may help-can be dangerous - 30% mortality
Ruxolitinib: JAK inhibitor
-intermediate and high risk myelofibrosis, including primary myelofibrosis, post-polycythemia vera myelofibrosis and post-essential thrombocythemia myelofibrosis