Term
how is a suspected myelodysplastic syndrome/myeloproliferative neoplasm evaluated? |
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Definition
peripheral blood smear, bone marrow aspirate, bone marrow trephine bx, blasts, cytochemistry/special stains, immunophenotype, and genetic studies |
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Term
what are the myeloproliferative disorders? |
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Definition
CML (not truly considered a leukemia), chronic neutrophilic leukemia (rare), polycythemia vera, primary myelofibrosis, essential thrombocythemia, chronic eosinphilic leukemia, mastocytosis, and MPN (unclassifiable) |
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Term
what are characteristics of myeloproliferative disorders? |
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Definition
usually increased bone marrow cellularity, slightly increased blasts (<10%), normal morphology, effective hematopoiesis, CBC (increase in 1+ cell lines), organomegaly common, abnormalities in tyrosine kinases (proliferation) |
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Term
what is the myeloperoxidase stain sensitive for? |
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Definition
cells of myelioid lineage via the golgi(early monoblasts may not respond) |
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Term
what does sudan black B stain for? |
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Definition
it is like a less specific myeloperoxidase stain, (sometimes picks up lymphoblasts) |
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Term
what do the non-specific esterases stain for? |
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Definition
mostly monoblasts/monocytes |
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Term
what is the naphthol-ASD-chloroacetate esterase stain for? |
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Definition
neutrophil lineage/mast cells |
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Term
what gene is mutated in CML? |
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Definition
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Term
what is the prototypical myeloproliferative and most common disorder? what age are people that get it typically? |
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Definition
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Term
will you see increased basophils with CML? |
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Definition
yes (one in almost every field) |
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Term
will many fat globules be see in CML bone marrow? |
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Definition
no - "chock full of cells" - but normal maturation |
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Term
what are the three phases of CML? what happens w/o tx? |
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Definition
chronic, accelerated and blast phase; this progression will happen w/o tx |
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Term
when are most pts diagnosed with CML? what are symptoms? |
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Definition
chronic phase. it may be asymptomatic, (but incidental CBC shows abnormal WBC). signs and symptoms may include fatigue, weight loss, night sweats, splenomegaly and anemia |
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Term
why is the philadelphia chr important? |
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Definition
it was the first real genetic signature of malignancy, an abnormal tyrosine kinase growth advantage to normal cells |
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Term
what is the characteristic chromosome translocation associated with the phila chr? is it related to any other diseases? |
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Definition
t(9:22) BCR-ABL, (but if it breaks down farther on the gene it can result in ALL) |
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Term
where is the BCR gene? ABL1? what does this result in? |
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Definition
BCR is on chr 22 and ABL1 is on chr 9; resulting in an activated tyrosine kinase which gives malignant cells a growth advantage (therapeutic target) |
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Term
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Definition
leukocyte alkaline phosphatase is a marker of terminally differentiated neutrophils. if it is low, it indicates an abnormal neutrophil development -> associated with CML and PNH |
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Term
what does a low LAP score mean? |
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Definition
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Term
what is the chronic phase of CML characterized by? |
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Definition
leukocytosis (median WBC: 100x10^9 -> mainly neutrophils), blasts <2% of WBCs, platelet count normal/increases, *megakaryocytes small/hypolobated, mild anemia, and basophilia |
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Term
what is the basophilic peripheral %? |
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Definition
equal or >20%, also possibly prominent eosinophils |
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Term
what is the accelerated phase of CML characterized by? |
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Definition
myeloblasts accounting for 10-19% of peripheral WBC count and peripheral blood basophils equal or >20% and EITHER thrombocytopenia OR thrombocytosis. WBC increase/spleen size will not be responsive to rx. there is evidence of clonal evolution |
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Term
what is the blast phase of CML characterized by? |
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Definition
blasts equal or >20% of peripheral WBC/BM. this is the transition into AML or ALL. there is extramedullary proliferation of blasts and aggregates of blasts in the BM |
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Term
what are 2 visible signs of CML? |
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Definition
enlarged spleen and "pseudo-gaucher/sea-blue histiocytes" (which are due to high cell turnover in BM) |
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Term
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Definition
gleevec: manages malignant clone, does not cure it. bone marrow transplant: only potential cure (wipe out/destroy malignant clone, replace with donor myeloid precursors -> risky) |
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Term
what if the M/A of gleevec? |
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Definition
gleevec (imatinib mesylate) competitively inhibits the inactive enzyme leading to configuration of BCR-ABL, by *blocking the ATP site (preventing the active form). this inhibits cell proliferation and will decrease up to 98% of CML colony growth w/o decreasing normal growth |
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Term
can gleevec cure CML? what is primary/secondary resistance? |
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Definition
no, it just keeps normal myeloid elements at a sustainable level and reduces cytogenic expression of the fusion gene. primary resistance is when gleevec fails to achieve an initial response, secondary is when pts develop resistance to subsequent tx (due to reactivation of BCR-ABL, or alternate pathways). resistance is most likely to occur in the blast phase |
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Term
what is a good way of monitoring CML progression? |
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Definition
molecular studies; accelerated/blast phase pts may have additional Ph chr or other altered genes |
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Term
what is chronic neutrophilic leukemia? |
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Definition
this may be associated with multiple myeloma and is essentially sustained neutrophilia w/o any other cause. it presents with hepatosplenomegaly/gout/pruritis. very rare: diagnosis of excusion - WBC >25 has to be sustained. genetics are normal in 90% |
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Term
what is polycythemia vera? |
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Definition
a chronic myeloproliferative neoplasm with *increased RBC production - independent of normal erythropoiesis (erythropoiten is going to be low). **almost all** have JAK2 V617F mutation (or a variant thereof) |
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Term
what are symptoms of pts with polycythemia vera? |
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Definition
increased red cell mass and panmyelosis (other myeloid cells). there are symptoms related to HTN/vascular abnormalities due to increased red cell mass such as venous/arterial thrombosis, MI or stroke and portal-splenic thrombosis (budd-chiari syndrome) |
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Term
what are JAK-2 mutations specific to? |
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Definition
myeloid neoplasms. chr 9p. janus kinase family - normally involved in signaling by cytokine receptors of hematopoietic cells (conquers proliferation damage) |
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Term
what are *major diagnostic criteria for polycythemia vera? |
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Definition
hgb >18.5 men and >16.5 women (can be juked with dehydration). presence of JAK2 mutation (no BCR-ABL1) and no cause of secondary erythropoiesis (elevation of EPO due to hypoxia, high O2 affiniy Hb, or EPO production by a tumor), and splenomegaly |
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Term
what are *minor diagnostic criteria for polycythemia vera? |
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Definition
bone marrow hypercellularity (trilineage growth), serum erythropoietin below reference range, and endogenous colony formation in vitro. |
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Term
what are the phases of polycythemia vera? |
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Definition
prodomal/prepolychythmic: only mild erythrocytosis. overt polycythemic: significantly increased RBC mass. and spent phase: myelofibrosis, pancytopenia, and extensive marrow fibrosis. |
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Term
what is the prognisis for pts with polycythemia vera? |
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Definition
survival: >10 yrs, most pts die of thrombosis. up to 20% develop MDS or leukemia, (if treated with cytoxic therapy, risk of progression is higher than if not) |
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Term
what is budd-chiari syndrome? |
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Definition
most commonly caused by polycythemia vera, this is thrombotic/non-thrombotic obstruction to hepatic venous outflow. this can lead to hepatomegaly, ascites, and abdominal pain (high mortality) |
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Term
what might pts with budd chiari syndrome present with? |
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Definition
icterus, ascities, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, ankle edema, stasis ulcerations, and prominence of collateral veins |
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Term
what do the acute and chronic forms of budd chiari syndrome cause? |
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Definition
acute: hepatic vein thrombosis (often fatal) chronic: cirrhosis/formation of collateral veins |
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Term
what is primary myelofibrosis major? |
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Definition
proliferation of megakaryocytes (they aren't squeezed out yet) with *reticulin and *collagen fibrosis that *does not meet criteria for CML, PV, or MDS. JAK2 is often involved. |
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Term
what is primary myelofibrosis minor? |
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Definition
leukoerythroblastosis (immature neutrophil forms/RBCs in peripheral blood), increased serum LDH, anemia and palpable splenomegaly |
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Term
how do RBCs in primary myelofibrosis appear? |
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Definition
pear shaped from squeezing out of fibrotic bone marrow |
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Term
what is the correlation between primary myelofibrosis and JAK2 V617F mutations? can it progress to AML? |
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Definition
about 50% of pts have both. AML progression occurs in 5-30% of cases |
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Term
what is essential thrombocythemia? |
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Definition
platelet count >450x10^9. it features megakaryocyte proliferation with large and mature morphology. it should not meet criteria for CML, PV, PMF, MDS, or other myeloid neoplasms. JAK 2 is a clonal marker in 40-50% of cases |
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Term
how do pts with essential thrombocytothemia present? |
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Definition
spenic/hepatic vein thrombosis. they may have vascular occlusion hemorrhage, or bleeding from mucosal surfaces, GI tract, and upper airways |
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Term
how are megakaryocytes in essential thrombocytothemia differentiated from those in CML? |
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Definition
essential thrombocytothemia: huge, hyperlobated. CML: micro-megakaryocytes |
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Term
what are the criteria for post-essential thrombocytothemia myelofibrosis? |
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Definition
documentation of essential thrombocytothemia and a high bone marrow fibrosis grade |
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Term
are platlets produced in essential thrombocytothemia functional? |
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Definition
many of them do not work very well |
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Term
what is chronic eosinophilic leukemia (very rare)? |
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Definition
a persistent eosinophil count of >1.5x10^9. it cannot be releated to previous genetics or allergies, neoplasms w/secondary eosinophilia (T cell lymphomas, HD, ALL, mastocytosis), or a myeloproliferative dx. evidence of clonality should be available (ie X-linked polymorphism analysis of PGK or HUMARA genes) |
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Term
how can chronic eosinophilic leukemia cause organ damage? |
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Definition
abnormal release of cytokines, IL-2,3,5, GM-CSF |
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Term
how do cells appear histologically in chronic eosinophilic leukemia? |
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Definition
sparse granulation, cytoplasmic vacuolation, nuclear hyper/hypo-segmentation and enlarged size |
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Term
what is hypereosinophilic syndrome? |
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Definition
a persistent eosinophil count (1.5x10^9) for 6 mos with no other explanation for eosinophilia and no evidence of clonality (polyclonal) |
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Term
what is mast cell disease? |
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Definition
a clonal proliferation of mast cells in one or more organ systems - any age and 80% have skin involvement |
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Term
what is cutaneous mastocytosis? |
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Definition
histological proof of abnormal mast cells in the dermis with NO evidence of systemic involvement. this may show uriticaria if the skin is stroked and there is intrapepidermal pigment accumulation (urticaria pigmentosa) |
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Term
what happens in systemic mastocytosis? |
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Definition
fatigue, weight loss, skin manifestations, cytokine mediator events (GI distress/respiratory distress), musculoskeletal (myalgias, osteopenia), and organomegaly |
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Term
what is diagnostic criteria for systemic mastocytosis? |
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Definition
dense infiltrates of mast cells in the marrow and serum tryptase exceeding 20 ng/mL (part of inflammatory mast cell secretion) |
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Term
what is chronic myelomonocytic leukemia actually considered? |
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Definition
a myelodysplasia/myeloproliferative disease |
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Term
what are characteristics of chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML)? |
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Definition
persistent peripheral blood monocytosis >1x10^9, no phila chr, fewer than 20% blasts in the blood/bone marrow (not actually considered leukemia), it seen in older adults, and dysplasia is in 1+ myeloid lineages. rare. |
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Term
how do pts with chronic monocyic myelomonocyic leukemia present? |
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Definition
fatigue, weight loss, fever, and night sweats. WBC count is increased at time of dx |
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Term
what is the difference between CMML-1 and 2? |
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Definition
there are increased blasts in the blood in CMML-2 (BUT >20% in the bone marrow - AML) |
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Term
what is juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia? |
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Definition
JMML is a disease in children where there is proliferation of granulocytic and monocytic lineages. 10% of cases are associated with neurofibromatosis type 1. (similar to CMML) |
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Term
what are dx criteria for JMML? |
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Definition
peripheral blood monocytosis >1x10^9, blasts <20% of leukocytes, no phila chr, hemoglobin F increased for age and clonal chromosomal abnormality (monosomy 7 in the neoplasm) |
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Term
what is neurofibromatosis type 1? |
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Definition
cafe au lait spots, lisch nodules, optic gliomas, intellectual handicap and 200-500x risk of developing a myeloid malignancy |
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Term
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Definition
a group of hematopoietic stem/multipoten cell diseases w/dysplasia and ineffective hematopoiesis in 1+ myeloid line. there may be an increase in myeloblasts, and if it goes >20% = AML |
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Term
what is seen with myelodysplasia? |
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Definition
usually increased bone marrow cellularity, normal/increased blasts <20%, maturation of cell lines, dysplasia of 1+ myeloid lineages, ineffective hematopoiesis, CBC w/cytopenias, but organomegaly is uncommon |
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Term
how does peripheral blood appear in dysplasia? |
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Definition
RBCs are oval, discolored, dimorphic, nucleated. granulocytes are degranulated or have abnormally large granulesand pseudo pelger heut change (bilobed nuclei in neutrophils). platelets have giant forms and hypogranulation |
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Term
how does bone marrow appear in dysplasia? |
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Definition
RBCs: megaloblastoid change, nuclear budding, and numerous howel-jolly bodies (fragments of the RBC nucleus that should have been removed by the spleen). granulocytes: degranulation, abnormally large granules, pseudo pelger heut change (bilobed nuclei in neutrophils), and increased blast count. megakaryocytes: micromegakaryocytes, hyper/hyplobation of nuclei, abnormal clustering and paratrabeular location |
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Term
what are signs of dysplasia in RBC lineage? |
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Definition
vaculated cytoplasm, extensions, and ringed sideroblasts, multiple howell jolly bodies, lobated nucleus, nuclear-cytoplasmic dysynchrony, multinucleation and basophila stippling |
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Term
are ringed sideroblasts always pathologic? |
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Definition
yes. the majority of iron entering RBCs is incorporated into heme, the rest should be stored as ferritin |
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Term
how do sideroblasts form? |
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Definition
problems with ala-dehydrase which incorporates iron into the mitochondria for heme formation. this leads to a build up of iron around the nucleus (same ring formed by mitochondria) |
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Term
what are some things that can lead to sideroblasts? |
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Definition
lead poisoning and beta thalassemia |
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Term
how do myelodysplasia syndromes present clinically? |
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Definition
anemia refractory to iron therapy, symptoms of bone marrow if pancytopenia: infections secondary to neutropenia, mucosal bleeding due to thrombocytopenia |
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Term
what is refractory anemia? |
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Definition
anemia with no or rare blasts (<5%) and <15% ringed sideroblasts due to erythroid dysplasia |
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Term
what is refractory anemia with ringed sideroblasts (RARS)? |
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Definition
anemia with 15%+ ringed sideroblasts and erythroid dysplasia <5% blasts |
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Term
what is refractory anemia? who does it happen to? what has to be ruled out? what is the risk of progression to acute leukemia? |
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Definition
refractory anemia is dysplasia in the erythroid line, it is uncommon but if seen, it is in older adults. other causes such as drugs that might be causing the dysplasia should be ruled out and it can take a protracted clinical course. progression to acute leukemia is low. |
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Term
what is refractory anemia w/ringed sideroblasts? who does it happen to? what has to be ruled out? what is the risk of progression to acute leukemia? |
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Definition
refractory anemia w/ringed sideroblasts is a dysplasia only found in the erythroid line, it accounts for 10-12% of MDS cases, is seen in older adults and has an over all expected survival of ~ 6 yrs. progression to acute leukemia is low (1%) |
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Term
what is refractory cytopenia with multilineage myeloid displasia (RCMD)? |
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Definition
dysplasia is seen in 10%+ of cells in 2+ myeloid lines and there are <15% ringed sideroblasts, no auer rods, and <5% blasts in the marrow. it accounts for 24% of MDS cases, is a disease of older adults, there are cytogenetic abornalities half the time and overall survival is ~33 mos. progression to acute leukemia is ~11% |
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Term
what is refractory cytopenia with multilineage myeloid displasia and ringed sideroblasts? (RCMD-RS)? |
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Definition
dysplasia in 10%+ of the cells of 2+ myeloid cell lines and *>15% ringed sideroblasts. there are also no auer rods and <5% blasts in the marrow. |
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Term
what are refractory anemia with excess blasts-1 and 2? |
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Definition
RAEB-1 is 5-9% blasts and no auer rods, RAEB-2 is 10-19% blasts and *auer rod +/-. progression to AML is 25-30% likely. overall survival is 10-18 mos |
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Term
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Definition
unilineage dysplasia, <5% blasts and no auer rods. it is seen in middle-aged to elderly women, symptoms are related to severe anemia, survival should be long, and progression to leukemia is rare (except if additional chr abnormalities) |
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Term
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Definition
consideration of co-morbities (esp in elderly), supportive care, RBC transfusions (iron overload can lead to secondary hemaochromatosis, caridac + liver complications), iron chelation, hematopoietic growth factors, and chemo (not if potential for leukemia) |
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