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heme/onc FINAL
n/a
134
Health Care
Graduate
11/22/2009

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Term
how does MM cause coagulopathy?
Definition
Fab portion of M protein binds to fibrinogen and inhibits its polymerization and clot formation. light chains can bind to factor X and cause factor X deficiency and bleeding. M protein can bind to platelets and interfere with their functions
Term
what is the triad of molecules shown to regulate osteoclast activity?
Definition
NF-kB (RANK), RANK-Ligand, osteoprotegrin
Term
describe how rank and rank-l work? what does opg do?
Definition
RANK is a receptor for RANK-L located on preosteoblasts and mature osteoclasts. Rank-ligand binding to RANK mediates the differentiation, function and survival of osteoclasts. OPG is a natural soluble decoy receptor of RANKL, it modulates the effect of RANKL and is able to prevent excessive bone resorption in the normal state.
Term
what causes bone disease in MM?
Definition
increased function of osteoclasts via INCREASED RANKL
Term
hypercalcemia in MM is caused by? clinical manifestations?
Definition
caused by increased bone resorption. --> muscle weakness from abn nerve conduction, nausea, vomiting, poyura, polydypsia, dehydration, induced renal dysfunction
Term
what are the causes of death in MM (usually)?
Definition
sepsis and renal failure
Term
what is staging in MM based on? and what are the stages?
Definition
staging based on amt of beta2 microglobulin found in the serum. stage I (<3.5, 62 mp survival); stage 2 (between 3.5 and 5, survival 44 mos); stage 3 (>5, survival 29 mos)
Term
current gold standard for primary therapy in MM?
Definition
thalidomide, revlimid or bortezomib combined with dexamethasone with bisphosphonates. (high dose chemo with stem cell transplant indicated for appropriate patients)
Term
CD surface markers for myeloblasts?
Definition
CD34, CD13, CD33
Term
CD surface markers for monoblasts?
Definition
CD13, CD14, CD33, CD64
Term
what are auer rods made up of? and what are they pathognomonic for?
Definition
made up for lysosomes and granules fused in a row. pathognomonic for myeloid lineage cell
Term
which AML puts patient at risk for DIC?
Definition
acute promyelocytic leukemia t(15;17). degranulation of promyelocytes.
Term
AML with MDS related changes, what cytogenic abnormalities are common?
Definition
5q-, 7q-, 20q-
Term
what 2 drugs put us at risk for therapy-related AML?
Definition
1. alkylating agents (5-10 yrs after tx) pts usually have preceding MDS from previous therapy 2. topoisomerase II inhibitors (1-3 yrs after tx) involves disruption of MLL gene, poor prognosis
Term
which AMLs put us at risk for stroke?
Definition
MLL (pure monocytic lineage), AML M5 (acute monoblastic leukemia)
Term
which AML are unresponsive to therapy?
Definition
AML following MDS or therapy related
Term
what are the global treatments for AML?
Definition
cytarabine and daunorubicin with allopurinol/hydration to protect kidneys from uric acid precipitation (can use cytarabine alone)
Term
what is normal serum ferritin levels?
Definition
250-500 ng/mL
Term
what iron parameters are diagnostic for iron deficiency?
Definition
<10ng/mL ferritin. <10% transferrin saturation. increased total transferrin level (total iron binding capacity)
Term
how to distinguish IDA from ACD?
Definition
IDA has elevated transferrin and ACD has decreased transferrin
Term
tx of ACD?
Definition
erythropoieten
Term
what is hemochromatosis?
Definition
excessive absorption of food iron (6-8 mg/day vs 1-2) --> heart, liver, pancreas, kidney, joint disease
Term
what is the most common cause of hemochromatosis?
Definition
autosomal recessive homozygous mutation C282Y in HFE gene --> decreased expression of hepcidin --> increased export of iron from duodenal epithelium (penetrance of mutation less than 30% in males and less than 10% in females). heterozygotes also at risk, carrier state common and provides advantage d/t increased absorption of fod iron preventing nutritional deficiency.
Term
what lab results are consistent with hemochromatosis?
Definition
serum transferrin >45%, serum ferritin > 1000 ng/mL (indicates tx by phlebotomy until ferritin <50)
Term
what 3 things increase our absorption of iron?
Definition
recent blood loss, genetic disorders (hemochromatosis), thalassemias
Term
increased serum ferritin indicates?
Definition
chronic inflammatory disease or secondary to hemochromatosis
Term
whats the difference between hemochromatosis and hemosiderosis?
Definition
hemochromatosis is a genetic disorder. hemosiderosis is d/t frequent transfusions, increased dietary iron absorption in chronic hemolytic states)
Term
what would we find on a physical exam of a patient with iron deficiency anemia?
Definition
conjunctival pallor, nail bed changes (koilonychia), positive stool guiac, esophageal web, cheilosis
Term
what are the causes of ACD?
Definition
cancer, chronic infection, collagen-vascular disorders
Term
in iron deficient states, what happens to the level of ferritin?
Definition
decreased. body stores of iron low --> cytosolic aconitase conformational change --> binds to iron response element located at the 5' end of the ferritin mRNA --> inhibits translation of the ferritin mRNA
Term
when body is iron deficient, what happens to transferrin levels?
Definition
increases. there's an iron response element on the 3' end of transferrin mRNA (cf 5' end of ferritin mRNA) --> iron low? --> aconitase binds to the IRE and stabilizes the mRNA (cf aconitase INHIBITS ferritin mRNA)
Term
how do we distinguish between IDA and thalassemias which both have decreased MCH and MCV?
Definition
in thalassemias, all cells affected equally --> normal RDW (vs. IDA has increased RDW); iron absorption may be increased (>50 ng/mL); RED BLOOD CELL CT NORMAL (normal RBC ct r/o IDA)
Term
how do we diagnose B-thalassemia?
Definition
hemoglobin electrophoresis demonstrating elevation of HbA2
Term
how do we diagnose a-Thalassemia?
Definition
southern blot of alpha globin gene domain (detects deletions of one or both of the 2 alpha globin genes located on one or both chromosome 16s)
Term
why does the transferrin level not increase in ACD?
Definition
no increase in erythroid compartment mass (they produce it), and no change in the activity of the iron-binding protein
Term
hemoglobin A is ?
Definition
alpha2beta2
Term
hemoglobin A2 is?
Definition
alpha2delta2
Term
hemoglobin F is?
Definition
alpha2Agamma2, alpha2Ggamma2
Term
how do we get abnormal hemoglobin in hemoglobin S?
Definition
GAG --> GTG mutation in codon 6 of the beta globin gene (valine in place of glutamic acid) --> alpha2beta2S
Term
what is the blood make-up of people with sickle cell anemia?
Definition
85-95% HbS and 3-20% HbF (F cells - protective. higher proportion of F cell means more interference with sickling, but protective effect can never be complete bc only a minor proportion of circulating erythrocytes have the HbF), normal complement of HbA2 but can make no HbA
Term
sickle cell anemia: evaluate blood parameters: hematocrit, retic, serum indirect bilirubin, LDH
Definition
hematocrit 18-28%; retic increased 5-10%; indirect bilirubin increased, LDH elevated
Term
what is a serious complication of anemia?
Definition
acute chest syndrome - subjects develop severe shortness of breath, oxygen desaturation, lung infiltrates, chest pain and fever. (confused with pneumonia, pulm infarc, etc.) may be fatal
Term
why do we have to monitor fluid administration to sickle cell anemia patients?
Definition
their kidneys cannot concentrate urine and conserve water appropriately (hyposthenuria) --> tendency to dehydrate or become volume overloaded easily
Term
which drug has been shown to decrease the frequency of painful crises and other complications?
Definition
HYDROXYUREA
Term
what therapy do we use for sickle cell anemic children who experience stroke?
Definition
chronic exchange transfusion (lower proportion of HbS in circulation below 30%)
Term
what genetic abnormality leads to the formation of HbC?
Definition
GAG --> AAG mutation in the 6th codon of B globin gene, causing lysine in place of valine
Term
describe hemoglobin C disease (homozygous HbC)
Definition
mild, chronic hemolytic anemia, hematocrit ~30%.frequent target cells and spherocytes. HbC has tendency to form crystals within RBC subjecting the cells to phagocytosis by macrophages in the spleen. exhibit splenomegaly. have 98% HbC and NO HbA. generally well
Term
describe hemoglobin C trait.
Definition
subjects not ill, have half HbA and half HbC. not anemic. peripheral blood still has significant amount of target cells and spherocytes.
Term
describe the clinical manifestations of hemoglobin SC disease.
Definition
closely resembles sickle cell anemia - painful crises, thrombotic and vasculooclusive events, renal disease, retinal disease, acute chest syndrome. have hct slightly higher than sickle cell anemia, peripheral blood shows sickle cells, target cells and spherocytes. presence of SPLENOMEGALY r/o sickle cell anemia.
Term
what genetic change causes HbE?
Definition
substitution of lysine for glutamic acid at position 26 of beta globin gene.
Term
what genetic change causes HbE?
Definition
substitution of lysine for glutamic acid at position 26 of beta globin gene --> establishes an abnormal potential mRNA splice site --> proportion of mutant mRNA molecules undergo incorrect splicing (therefore not 50% HbA and 50% HbE, 75% HbA and 25% HbE)
Term
do people with unstable hemoglobins (d/t mutations that destabilize either binding of heme to globin or destabilizing the entire molecule) exhibit symptoms?
Definition
yes, but not all the time, only when triggered by exposure to a variety of drugs with redox properties (anti-malarials, sulfa drugs) or when they develop high fevers. then --> acute hemolytic episodes with sudden development of severe anemia, jaundice, dark urine. (otherwise exhibit mild, chronic hemolysis with little or no anemia)
Term
what happens to the oxy-hemoglobin dissociation curve, the hematocrit, and the EPO secretion of people with Hb with increased affinity for oxygen?
Definition
dissociation curve = left shifted with a decreased p50. tissue hypoxia --> increased EPO secretion --> markedly elevated Hct (hemoglobins inherited co-dominantly, therefore families have congenital erythrocytosis)
Term
what are the abnormal clinical findings of beta thalassemia trait?
Definition
normal healthy life. microcytosis, hypochromia, slightly enlarged spleen d/t chronic red cell sequestration, ELEVATED HbA2 (characteristic)
Term
what are the major clinical features of beta-thalassemia major? (pathophys)
Definition
unpaired excess alpha globin chains unstable and precipitate in cytoplasm --> precipitates bind to inside of RBC membrane --> damage and mark for destruction by macs --> destruction in marrow (intramedullary hemolysis) and periphery (hemolysis) --> severe life-long anemia requiring regular transfusion therapy
Term
what happens to untransfued children with beta-thalassemia major?
Definition
developmental abnormalities. massive overgrowth of erythropoietic tissue in bone marrow --> thinning of bone cortices --> skeletal abnormalities, distorted facial structure, pathological fractures.

extramedullary hematopoiesis --> massive splenomegaly, hepatomegaly, tumor-like masses of erythroid tissue in thorax, spinal canal, --> spinal cord compression
Term
if a patient has one sickle beta globin gene and one gene for beta thalassemia and the gene is beta +, what is the ratio of HbS to HbA?
Definition
always will make more HbS than HbA (vs. sickle cell anemia where there is always more HbA vs HbS)
Term
if patient has sickle cell gene AND beta thalassemia gene, beta 0, what is the HbS to HbA ratio?
Definition
makes ONLY HbS and no HbA.
Term
what clinical features are present in sickle cell - beta - thalassemia ?
Definition
splenomegaly, elevated HbA2, microcytosis
Term
what is the hydrops fetalis oxy-hemoglobian dissociation curve look like?
Definition
left shifted and hyperbolic rather than sigmoidal in shape.
Term
what are the clinical features of alpha thalassemia trait?
Definition
(2-3 alpha globin chains, and 1-2 deleted) --> hypochromia, microcytosis, elevated RBC counts, no anemia
Term
clinical features of HbH disease?
Definition
(subjects have only ONE alpha globin gene, and 3 deleted) --> hemolytic anemia of varying severity, more severe hypochromia and microcytosis than alpha thalassemia trait, splenomegaly, HbH (5-10%)
Term
clinical features of hydrops fetalis?
Definition
can make no alpha globin and hence NO HbF or HbA --> only have gamma4 tetramers (Hb Bart's) --> severe anemia, tissue hypoxia, CHF in utero, edematous, still born or die shortly after death
Term
what are some things that might cause MDS?
Definition
benzene (alkylating agents), topoisomerase inhibitors, radiation, DNA damage, decreased DNA repair, loss of chromosomal integrity, after hematological malignancies
Term
what's considered good cytogentics in MDS?
Definition
-y, 5q-, 20q-
Term
what's poor cytogenetics in MDS?
Definition
-7, 7q-, 17p, complex
Term
what's usually the first treatment choice for MDS?
Definition
growth factors (EPO, g-csf)
Term
when is g-csf used as tx in mds?
Definition
when the patient has an infection (to boost neutrophil counts) does not improve survival, does not help with prophylaxis, can be used in combination with EPO.
Term
when do we usually want to start iron chelation therapy?
Definition
after 20-30 units given, to decrease iron overload.
Term
what are 2 examples of hypomethylating agents used to treat mds?
Definition
azacitidine and decitabine (delays time to leukemic transformation, improves overall survival, high response rate)
Term
what is lenalidomide?
Definition
drug used in 5q- MDS or low-risk MDS without 5q-. can cause cytogenic remission (chr abn disappears). is an immune modulatory, anti-angiogenic drug that acts on the BM stroma. high response rate. transfusion independence. no neuropathy
Term
what is the only curative therapy for MDS?
Definition
allogenic stem cell transplantation. high treatment related morbidity and mortality. need donor HLA matched, best used in the young.
Term
describe 5q- syndrome
Definition
(subgroup of MDS) prolonged course, not very aggressive, <25% transformation to MDS, anemia is prominent. MONONUCLEAR MICROMEGAKARYOCYTES = pathognomonic. transfusion dependent --> iron overload. responsive to lenalidomide!
Term
what do we use to treat hypoplastic MDS?
Definition
anti-thymocyte globulin and cyclosporine. high dose steroids/prednisone
Term
what is CMML?
Definition
overlap syndrome (MDS and MPD) uncommon. shows trilineage dysplasia, monocytosis, anemia, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, granulomonocytic hyperplasia, PDGFR-beta translocations (good response to imanitib) tx with chemotherapy
Term
what is fanconi's anemia?
Definition
inherited aplastic anemia (autosomal recessive) short stature, cafe au lait spots, anomalies of thumb/radius, renal anomalies, progressive pancytopenia, increased risk of malignancy
Term
most common causes of secondary aplastic anemia?
Definition
EB, hepatitis, radiation, chemo, benzene, drug rxn, pregnancy, immune
Term
what is the treatment for aplastic anemia?
Definition
<45 --> BMT. >45 --> immunosuppression therapy (antithymocyte globulin, antilymphocyte globulin, cyclosporin, cyclophosphamide, methylprednisone)
Term
tear drop cells seen in?
Definition
CML
Term
typical natural history of CML? (timeline)
Definition
chronic phase 25 months, accelerated phase 12 months, blast crisis 1 month (blast crisis generally refractory to therapy)
Term
what is the etiology of CML?
Definition
association with ionizing radiation and radiation therapy
Term
how long does it take BM to fill up with Ph+ chromosomes fom the time the first Ph+ chromosome is obvious to clinical disesae?
Definition
6 years
Term
malignant transformation in CML occurs in which cell?
Definition
pluripotential stem cell bc Ph+ found in all cell lineages
Term
CML - hematologic remission means
Definition
normal blood count and normal bone marrow
Term
cytogenic remission means
Definition
no more Ph+
Term
CML molecular remission means?
Definition
no detection of bcr-abl
Term
what therapies are used to treat CML?
Definition
allogenic stem cell transplantation (major curative modality, used in young w/no other comorbidities and HLA match), alpha-interferon (alternative to those who cant have transplant, can induce cytogenic responses, can induce hematologic remissions, cytogenic responses) hydroxyurea, gleevac
Term
how does imanitib work?
Definition
occupies the ATP binding site in bcr-abl oncoprotein, prevents transfer of phosphate groups to tyrosine kinase residues on substrate molecules involved in signal transduction
Term
what is the malignant cell of origin in PV?
Definition
pluripotent stem cell
Term
describe PV progenitors' response to cytokines
Definition
hypersensitive to cytokines (EPO, TPO, GM-CSF, SCF)
Term
what is the etiology of PV?
Definition
aberrant intracellular signaling (single, acquired somatic point mutation in tyrosine kinasse JAK2) V617F mutation. all the receptors for growth factors that PV progenitors are hypersensitive to signal thru JAK2
Term
symptoms of PV all relate back to these 3 problems
Definition
hyperviscosity, elevated histamine release (d/t increase in basophils), microvascular events. (sx: headache, pruritis, weakness, dyspnea, dizzziness, visual changes, weight loss, epigastric pain, sweating, painful paresthesias of hands and feet)
Term
how do we differentiate between relative polycythemia and absolute polycythemia?
Definition
relative would have normal red cell mass and decreased plasma volume; absolute polycythemia would have increased red cell mass and normal plas a volume
Term
how do we differentiate between secondary polycythemia and polycythemia vera?
Definition
secondary would have increased (or normal) EPO; PV would have decreased (or normal) EPO
Term
what is the etiology of essential thrombocythemia?
Definition
mutation of JAK2 (V617F) in 50% patients. mutations in c-MPL (receptor for TPO) in small percentage of pts
Term
what is responsible for the thrombophilia in ET?
Definition
NOT increased platelet count alone. some suggestion that elevated WBC ct may contribute.
Term
what causes uncontrolled thrombocytosis and clinical bleeding in ET patients/
Definition
removal of high molecular weight VWF multimers from circulation by the excessive number of platelets
Term
what is the treatment for ET?
Definition
hydroxyurea, also management of reversible CV risk factors (smoking, obesity, etc) and all patients, regardless of risk should receive low dose aspirin unless contraindicated
Term
what causes fibrosis of the bone marrow in primary myelofibrosis?
Definition
increased collagen and/or reticulin deposition. normal bone marrow fibroblasts are stimulated to produce collagen/reticulin by growth factors that are released by megakaryocytes (PDGF, TGF-beta, FGF, etc.)
Term
tx for primary myelofibrosis?
Definition
mainly supportive (blood transfusions and EPO for anemia; hydroxyurea and radiation for splenomegaly; splenectomy in select pts; allogenic stem cell transplantation)
Term
which HLA types are important in graft failure?
Definition
HLA-A, B, DR
Term
GVHD is a greater risk in which class of disparities?
Definition
class II (HLA DR, DQ, DP)
Term
which type of stem cell carries the lowest risk for GVHD?
Definition
CORD BLOOD
Term
acute GVHD involves what clinical manifestations?
Definition
skin, GI tract and liver (up to 100 days after raft)
Term
chronic GVHD involves what clinical manifestations?
Definition
chronic inflammation, appears like an autoimmune disorder
Term
whats the difference b/w GVHD and GVL?
Definition
GVHD T cells respond to broadly expressed host antigens; GVL T cells respond to hematopoietically restricted host antigens
Term
how long does it take infected hepatocytes to rupture after initial infection with sporozoite?
Definition
8-15 days (releases merozoites)
Term
how do merozoites gain entry into RBC?
Definition
specific receptors on RBC (Duffy blood group glycoprotein for P. vivax and glycophorin A & C and band 3 protein for falciparum) --> parasite-induced phagocytosis
Term
which form of RBC does p. vivax infect?
Definition
reticulocytes
Term
which RBC form does p. ovale infect?
Definition
reticulocyte
Term
which RBC form does p. malariae infect?
Definition
senescent RBC
Term
which RBC form does falciparum infect?
Definition
RBC of all ages
Term
what happens after merozoites get into RBC?
Definition
they de-differentiate into trophozoites --> divide (called shizonts - dividing form) --> generation of merozoites that infect other RBC (some trophozoites develop into gametocytes)
Term
what is the life span of an adult anopheline mosquito?
Definition
14 days
Term
how long does it take falciparum to develop in a mosquito?
Definition
10 days
Term
what is a prepatent period and how long does it last?
Definition
period between infection and detection of parasites (5-14 days)
Term
what is an incubation period and how long does it last in malaria?
Definition
period between infection and appearance of clinical sx; 1 week to 1 month
Term
what symptoms characterize the paroxysm phase of malaria?
Definition
shaking chills --> high fever --> intense sweating/exhaustion --> feel better until next paroxysm
Term
which spp. have 48 hour paroxysms? 72? continuous?
Definition
p.vivax, p.falciparum, p.ovale have 48 hour. p.malariae has 72 hr.; synchrony of merozoite release is less marked in falciparum, so fever may be more or less continuous
Term
recrudescence may occur in all four spp but for how long after initial infection?
Definition
in p.falciparum 1-3 years after primary infection; in p.malariae 25-30 years after primary infection; can occur in ovale and vivax but cannot be distinguished from a relapse
Term
what's causing the fever in malaria paroxysms?
Definition
massive amount of antigen being released at once (each progeny released is antigenically different) and release of endogenous pyrogens (TNFa and IL1, IL6)
Term
what causes anemia in malarial infections?
Definition
hemolysis of the infected RBC, abnormally rapid splenic removal of non-parasitized rbc and dyserythropoiesis
Term
what causes cerebral malaria?
Definition
attachment of both infected and uninfected rbc to vascular endothelium (cytoadherence) --> impaired microcirulation --> tissue hypoxia (hypoperfusion of brain) and hypoglycemia --> in kids may present as seizures or coma and in adults altered mental status
Term
what mediates cytoadherence in malaria? (adherence of RBC to endothelial vessels causing CNS effects)
Definition
each spp. has characteristic morphological changes in the infected erythrocyte membrane. (falciparum produces proteins that form knob-like protrusions) i.e. pfEMP1 binds to CD36 and ICAM-1 and thrombospondin on the vascular endothelium. also when infected RBC rupture, they release TNFa, IL1, IL6, INFg that cause fever and also do something to the endothelial wall to make them better at binding infected rbc (upregulate cd36, icam1?)
Term
what causes glomerulonephritis in malaria?
Definition
immune complex deposition from p.malariae infection
Term
what causes pulmonary edema in malaria infections?
Definition
leaky capillaries (mediated by elevated TNFa levels?)
Term
what causes watery diarrhea in malaria?
Definition
cytoadherence of parasitized rbc in microvasculature of both the small and large intestines
Term
what happens if there's a p.vivax infection and a p.vivax merozoite comes into contact with a duffy-negative rbc?
Definition
merozoite attachment can still occur, but junction formation does not proceed
Term
how does band3 help falciparum gain entry into rbc?
Definition
attachment of merozoites to band3 induces rearrangment of intramembrane particles and formation of a junction between merozoite and rbc membranes --> junction expands and internalizes and encloses completely
Term
why does sickle cell heterozygosity confer resistance to malaria?
Definition
intracellular K+ decreases in HbS/A erythrocytes under low O2 tension and that causes parasite death. sickling may also render rbc more vulnerable to phagocytosis
Term
is immunity against malaria permanent?
Definition
no. requires continued exposure. susceptibility returns if a person removed from endemic area returns.
Term
what is the gold standard of diagnosis for malaria?
Definition
microscopy (thin or thick smears --> soak in distilled h20 --> rbc lyse --> parasites remain sticking together) see more parasites in thick smear, species differentiation easier in thin smear.
Term
if a person is glycophorin A, B or C deficient, which form of malaria are they resistant to?
Definition
falciparum
Term
if a person lacks band 3 protein, what are they resistant to?
Definition
cerebral malaria
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