Chapter 14: Myelodysplasia Flashcards

1
Q

What are myelodysplastic syndromes?

A

A group of disorders associated with multipotent stem cells that causes bone marrow failure.

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2
Q

What are the characteristic features of Myelodysplasia?

A

Ineffective hemopoiesis and cytopenia with marrow of normal or increased cellularity.

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3
Q

What is the pathogenesis of myelodysplasia?

A

Damage to hematopoietic progenitors causes increased stem cell proliferation with decreased differentiation. The result is cytopenia with hypercellular bone marrow.

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4
Q

What is the epidemiology of MDS?

A

(1) the incidence is 4 in 100,000
(2) More common in men
(3) over 50% of patients are over 70.

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5
Q

What are the clinical features of MDS?

A

(1) anemia
(2) thrombocytopenia
(3) neutropenia.

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6
Q

MDS can occur as a secondary feature of what conditions?

A

(1) excess alcohol intake
(2) Magaloblastic anemia
(3) chemotherapy
(4) growth factor therapy

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7
Q

What hematologic findings are associated with MDS?

A

(1) pancytopenia
(2) Macrocytic, dimorphic, hypochromic, or normocytic anemia may be seen.
(3) Low reticulocyte count.
(4) Impaired abnormal granulocytes
(5) Pelger anomaly

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8
Q

What are the characteristics of the bone marrow in MDS?

A

(1) abnormal celllularity (hypocellular 20%
(2) Ring sideroblasts
(3) Abnormal morphology and development of multiple cell lines.

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9
Q

What proportion of the bone marrow must be dysplastic for a diagnosis of MDS to be made?

A

10% or more.

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10
Q

What genetic abnormalities are associated with MDS?

A

(1) Monosomy 5 or 7
(2) Trisomy 8
(3) partial deletion of 5q
(5) RAS mutation in 20% of cases
(6) FMS mutation in 15% of cases

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11
Q

What factors are used to classify myelodysplastic syndromes?

A

Blood count
Morphological appearance
number of blast cells in the bone marrow or blood.

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12
Q

What is refractory anemia?

A

MDS that only effects the red cell lineage.

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13
Q

What is refractory anemia with multilineage dysplasia?

A

MDS that effects multiple cell lines.

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14
Q

What is unclassified MDS?

A

MDS that effects only one non-red cell lineage.

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15
Q

Why is treating MDS extremely difficult?

A

Many chemotherapies make the MDS worse.

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16
Q

What is low grade MDS?

A

(1) less than 5% blasts in the bone marrow
(2) Only one cytopenia
(3) favorable cytogenetics

17
Q

How is low grade MDS treated?

A

(1) supportive therapy(blood transfusions)
(2) EPO, G-CSF
(3) Immunosuppression (ATG, ciclosporin)

18
Q

When is supportive therapy alone used for high-risk MDS?

A

In elderly patients with other health problems high risk MDS may be treated only with blood/platelet transfusions, and or antimicrobial therapies.

19
Q

For what form of MDS is single agent chemotherapy sometimes helpful?

A

Refractory anemia with excess blasts (RAEB) is sometimes treated with single agent chemotherapy. (Hydroxyurea, etoposide, 6-MP, C-ARA, azacytidine, or decitabine)

20
Q

When is intensive chemotherapy used to treat MDS?

A

High risk MDS may be treated with intensive chemotherapy however despite high remission rates relapse is almost inevitable.

21
Q

How can MDS be cured?

A

By stem cell transplant.

22
Q

What are the criteria for high risk MDS?

A

(1) greater than 5% blasts
(2) unfavorable cytogenetics
(3) Pancytopenia

23
Q

What are myelodysplastic/myeloproliferative disorders?

A

disorders characterized by dysplastic cells and increased numbers of circulating cells.

24
Q

What is chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML)?

A

MDS characterized by persistent monocytosis and leukocytosis.

25
Q

What are the presenting features of CMML?

A

(1) skin rashes
(2) gum hypertrophy
(3) lymphadenopathy
(4) splenomegaly (50%)

26
Q

How is CMML treated?

A

Hydroxyurea, etoposide, mercaptopurine standard patients and
Stem cell transplant in younger patients.

27
Q

What is the prognosis for CMML?

A

median survival is two years.