Clonal haematopoeitic disorders Proliferation of one of myeloid lineages Relatively normal maturation
Transcription
Clonal haematopoeitic disorders Proliferation of one of myeloid lineages Relatively normal maturation
Myeloproliferative disorders Clonal haematopoeitic disorders Proliferation of one of myeloid lineages Granulocytic Erythroid Megakaryocytic Relatively normal maturation Myeloproliferative disorders WHO Classification of CMPD Ch Myeloid leukemia Ch Neutrophillic leukemia Ch Eosinophillic leukemia / Hyper Eo Synd Polycythemia Vera Essential Thrombocythemia Myelofibrosis CMPD unclassifiable Myeloproliferative disorders MPD •PRV •ET •MF CML CMML MDS •RA •RARS •RAEB I •RAEB II AML Myeloproliferative disorders Ch Myeloid leukemia (BCR-ABL positive) Polycythemia Vera Essential Thrombocythemia Myelofibrosis Specific clincopathologic criteria for diagnosis and distinct diseases, have common features Increased number of one or more myeloid cells Hepatosplenomegaly Hypercatabolism Clonal marrow hyperplasia without dysplasia Predisposition to evolve Bone marrow stem cell Clonal abnormality Granulocyte precursors Chronic myeloid leukemia Red cell precursors Polycythaemia rubra vera (PRV) 10% 70% AML Megakaryocytes Reactive fibrosis Essential thrombocytosis (ET) Myelofibrosis 10% 30% Epidemiology of CML Median age range at presentation: 45 to 55 years Incidence increases with age 12% - 30% of patients are >60 years old At presentation 50% diagnosed by routine laboratory tests 85% diagnosed during chronic phase Epidemiology of CML Ionizing radiation Latent Period Atomic bomb survivors 11 years ( 2-25) Ankylosing spondylitis pts 3.6 years (1-6) No evidence of other genetic factors Chemical have not been associated with CML Incidence 1-1.5/100,000 population Male predominance Presentation Insidious onset Anorexia and weight loss Symptoms of anaemia Splenomegaly –maybe massive Pt . maybe asymptomatic The Philadelphia Chromosome 1 2 3 6 7 8 13 14 15 19 20 9 21 4 5 10 11 12 16 17 22 X 18 Y The Philadelphia Chromosome: t(9;22) Translocation 9 9+ Philadelphia Ph chromosome 22 bcr bcr-abl abl Fusion protein with tyrosine kinase activity Clinical Course: Phases of CML Advanced phases Chronic phase Median 4–6 years stabilization Accelerated phase Blastic phase (blast crisis) Median duration up to 1 year Median survival 3–6 months Terminal phase Treatment of Chronic Myeloid leukemia Arsenic Radiotherapy Busulfan Hydroxyurea Autografting Allogeneic BMT (SD) Interferon Allogeneic BMT (UD) Donor Leukocytes Imatinib Imatinib/Combination therapy Lissauer, 1865 Pusey, 1902 Galton, 1953 Fishbein et al, 1964 Buckner et al, 1974 Doney et al, 1978 Talpaz et al, 1983 Beatty et al, 1989 Kolb et al, 1990 Druker et al, 1998 O’Brien et al, 200…… CML Treatment •Chemotherapy to reduce WCC - Hydroxyurea •Interferon based treatment •Allogeneic bone marrow transplant •Molecular therapy - Imatinib CML- CP survival post BMT Probability % (IBMTR 1994-1999) Years Issues related to BMT • 70% long term cure rate • Donor Availability • Age of patient • Length/stage of disease • Treatment related mortality • Long term sequalae – infertility, cGVHD The Ideal Target for Molecular Therapy Present in the majority of patients with a specific disease Determined to be the causative abnormality Has unique activity that is - Required for disease induction - Dispensable for normal cellular function Mechanism of Action of Imatinib Bcr-Abl Bcr-Abl Substrate Substrate P P P ATP Imatinib Y = Tyrosine P = Phosphate P Goldman JM. Lancet. 2000;355:1031-1032. Imatinib compared with interferon and low dose Cytarabine for newly diagnosed chronic-phase Chronic Myeloid leukemia S.G. O’Brien et al New England Journal of Medicine Vol. 348 March 2003 Imatinib vs Interferon in newly diagnosed CP Chronic Myeloid leukemia (18 months) Imatinib 400mg Interferon and Ara-C CHR 96% 67% MCR 83% 20% CCR 68% 7% Intolerance 0.7% 23% Progressive disease 1.5% 7% Evolution of treatment goals HR HU IFN Imatinib BMT MCR CCR PCR - Issues related to Imatinib • Very few molecular responses (5-10%) • Resistance in some patients • Lack of response in some patients • Expensive • Long term toxicity/side effects unknown CML Diagnosis Young with a well-matched donor Start Imatinib at 400mg/day Cosider for Allograft Poor response or Initial response Followed by Loss of response Good response maintained Allo SCT Add or substitute Other agents Allo-SCT Auto Continue Imatinib indefinitely Polycythemia True / Absolute Primary Polycythemia Secondary Polycythemia Epo dependent Hypoxia dependent Hypoxia independent Epo independent Apparent / Relative Reduction in plasma volume Causes of secondary polycythemia ERYTHROPOIETIN (EPO)-MEDIATED Hypoxia-Driven Chronic lung disease Right-to-left cardiopulmonary vascular shunts High-altitude habitat Chronic carbon monoxide exposure (e.g., smoking) Hypoventilation syndromes including sleep apnea Renal artery stenosis or an equivalent renal pathology Hypoxia-Independent (Pathologic EPO Production) Malignant tumors Nonmalignant conditions Uterine leiomyomas Renal cysts Postrenal transplantation Adrenal tumors EPO RECEPTOR–MEDIATED Hepatocellular carcinoma Renal cell cancer Cerebellar hemangioblastoma Activating mutation of the erythropoietin receptor DRUG-ASSOCIATED EPO Doping Treatment with Androgen Preparations POLYCYTHEMIA VERA Chronic, clonal myeloproliferative disorder characterized by an absolute increase in number of RBCs 2-3 / 100000 Median age at presentation: 55-60 M/F: 0.8:1.2 POLYCYTHEMIA VERA JAK2 Mutation JAK/STAT: cellular proliferation and cell survival deficiency in mice at embryonic stage is lethal due to the absence of definitive erythropoiesis Abnormal signaling in PV through JAK2 was first proposed in 2004 a single nucleotide JAK2 somatic mutation (JAK2V617F mutation) in the majority of PV patients Clinical features Plethora Persistent leukocytosis Persistent thrombocytosis Microcytosis secondary to iron deficiency Splenomegaly Generalized pruritus (after bathing) Unusual thrombosis (e.g., Budd-Chiari syndrome) Erythromelalgia (acral dysesthesia and erythema) Clinical features Hypertention Gout Leukaemic transformation Myelofibrosis Diagnostic Criteria A1 A2 A3 A4 B1 B2 B3 B4 Raised red cell mass Normal O2 sats and EPO Palpable spleen No BCR-ABL fusion Thrombocytosis >400 x 109/L Neutrophilia >10 x 109/L Radiological splenomegaly Endogenous erythroid colonies A1+A2+either another A or two B establishes PV Treatment The mainstay of therapy in PV remains phlebotomy to keep the hematocrit below 45 percent in men and 42 percent in women Additional hydroxyurea in high-risk pts for thrombosis (age over 70, prior thrombosis, platelet count >1,500,000/microL, presence of cardiovascular risk factors) Aspirin (75-100 mg/d) if no CI IFNa (3mu three times per week) in patients with refractory pruritus, pregnancy Anagrelide (0.5 mg qds/d) is used mainly to manage thrombocytosis in patients refractory to other treatments. Allopurinol Essential Thrombocythaemia (ET) Clonal MPD Persistent elevation of Plt>600 x109/l Poorly understood Lack of positive diagnostic criteria 2.5 cases/100000 M:F 2:1 Median age at diagnosis: 60, however 20% cases <40yrs Clinical Features Vasomotor Headache Lightheadedness Syncope Erythromelalgia (burning pain of the hands or feet associated with erythema and warmth) Transient visual disturbances (eg, amaurosis fujax, scintillating scotomata, ocular migraine) Thrombosis and Haemorrhage Transformation Investigations ET is a diagnosis of exclusion Rule out other causes of elevated platelet count Diagnostic criteria for ET Platelet count >600 x 109/L for at least 2 months Megakaryocytic hyperplasia on bone marrow aspiration and biopsy No cause for reactive thrombocytosis Absence of the Philadelphia chromosome Normal red blood cell (RBC) mass or a HCT <0.48 Presence of stainable iron in a bone marrow aspiration No evidence of myelofibrosis No evidence of MDS Therapy of ET based on the risk of thrombosis
Similar documents
Clonal haematopoeitic disorders Proliferation of one of myeloid lineages Relatively normal maturation
More information
Treating Chronic Myeloid Leukemia: Improving Management Through Understanding of the Patient Experience
More information
Guideline for the Management of Patients with Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia... Version History Version
More information