Myelodysplastic Syndromes & Myeloproliferative Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Etiologic factors involved in development of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS)

A

Mostly a disease of aging (due to chromosomal and genetic instability)

Environmental exposures — radiation, benzene

Secondary MDS associated with hx of radiation therapy and chemo (esp alkylating agents like busulfan, nitrosurea, or procarbazine, and the DNA topoisomerase inhibitors, and anthracyclines)

Germline mutations in GATA2, RUNX1, or telomere repair gene mutations

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2
Q

Cytogenetic abnormalities associated with MDS

A

Loss of all or part of 5, 7, and 20

Trisomy 8

Inv16

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3
Q

MDS associated with mutations of genes of splicing machinery, especially SF3B1 are associated with ____ anemia

A

Sideroblastic

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4
Q

Gene mutations that correlate with poor px of MDS

A

EZH2
TP53
RUNX1
ASXL1

Monosomy 7
Hypodiploidy

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5
Q

Gene mutations that correlate with favorable px of MDS

A

Spliceosome defects (5q syndrome)

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6
Q

Consequences of 5q- deletion in MDS

A

5q- deletion leads to heterozygous loss of a ribosomal protein gene (ribosomal gene muations cause Diamond Blackfan anemia)

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7
Q

Overall, MDS has poor px with median survival 2 years. Course may be variable. Besides gene mutations, what are some pt factors that are associated with adverse px?

A

Marrow blasts >5%

Platelets <100,000/ul

Hemoglobin <10 g/dL

Neutrophils <2500/ul

Age >60

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8
Q

5q syndrome MDS has a beneficial response reported to _______

What is its MOA?

A

Lenalidomide

[Angiogenesis inhibitor for use in 5q syndrome ONLY]

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9
Q

Describe low/intermediate intensity therapy options for MDS, and their MOAs

A

5-azacytadine and decitabine

MOA: cause hypomethylation of DNA and direct cytotoxicity on abnormal bone marrow hematopoeitic cells

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10
Q

Major toxicities of azacitidine and decitabine

A

Myelosuppression —> worsening blood counts

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11
Q

Toxicities of lenalidomide

A

Myelosuppression (worsens neutropenia and thrombocytopenia)

Increased risk of DVT and PE

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12
Q

Common clinical complaints and PE findings in pts with idiopathic myelofibrosis

A

Pts present with sxs due to anemia and may have prominent systemic features such as fever, night sweats, anorexia, and weight loss.

Splenomegaly may be massive and cause abd pain and early satiety

PE reveals pallor, hepatomegaly, and dramatic splenomegaly that may extend to pelvic brim

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13
Q

Peripheral smear and bone marrow bx findings with myelofibrosis

A

Myelophthisic/leukoerythroblastic on PB — immature leukocytes, nucleated erythrocytes, teardrop shaped erythrocytes

Bone marrow bx usually a dry tap — can see increased reticulin and collagen fibrosis, increased numbers of dysplastic megakaryocytes, and osteosclerosis

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14
Q

Mutation found in 50% of myelofibrosis pts

A

JAK2 (V617F)

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15
Q

Mutations associated with chronic (idiopathic) myelofibrosis

A

JAK2

MPL (Thrombopoietin receptor)

CLR (calreticulin gene)

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16
Q

Tx plan for idiopathic myelofibrosis

A

No definitive therapy — symptom attenuation is goal

Danazol for anemia (consider transfusions)

Hydroxyurea for splenomegaly

Allopurinol for hyperuricemia/gout

Pegylated IFN-a can ameliorate fibrosis in early cases, but later exacerbates BM failure

Ruxolitinib (JAK2 inhibitor) for splenomegaly and consitutional sxs

Allogeneic BMT only curative therapy

17
Q

Common disorders known to cause secondary erythrocytosis

A

Hemoconcentration

COPD (smoker’s polycythemia)

EPO-producing tumors (RCC, neuroendocrine tumors)

Hemoglobinopathy with high affinity Hb

Living at high altitude (hypoxia from decreased FiO2)

18
Q

Common clinical complaints and PE findings in pts with polycythemia vera

A

Present with vague nonspecific sxs like HA or malaise

Less commonly pruritis w/skin or liver disease; may also have erythromelalgia

Complications =thromboembolic events

PE findings — plethora, HSM

19
Q

Virtually all pts with PCV have a mutation in ____

A

JAK2

20
Q

Usual lab findings with polycythemia vera

A

Erythrocytosis, often with leukocytosis and thrombocytosis

Elevated LAP score

Increased bands and myelocytes, as well as increased eosinophils and basophils

Low erythropoietin levels

Bone marrow exam = hypercellularity w/left shift

21
Q

Tx plan for polycythemia vera

A

Therapeutic phlebotomy

Pts with prior thromboembolic events should receive a myelosuppressive agent such as hydroxyurea

Stroke prevention — BP control, smoking cessation, hyperlipidemia management

22
Q

Secondary causes of erythrocytosis include: Hemoconcentration

COPD (smoker’s polycythemia)

EPO-producing tumors (RCC, neuroendocrine tumors)

Hemoglobinopathy with high affinity Hb

Living at high altitude (hypoxia from decreased FiO2)

—How would these be differentiated from polycythemia vera?

A

Exclude abnl lung function w/pulse ox and ABG (smokers have elevated carboxyhemoglobin); also PFT with DLCO

Also if JAK2 mutation is present along with normal serum EPO level, that identifies 98% of pts with P.vera

23
Q

Refractory anemia with ringed sideroblasts (RARS) will show ringed sideroblasts in marrow precursors. Some patients with anemia are found to have these ringed sideroblasts on marrow exam secondary to _____ deficiency; thus this lab must be checked on every pt with ringed sideroblasts!

A

B6 (pyridoxine)

— if B6 deficient, replace their B6 x6 months then repeat marrow, if no improvement then they have RARS

24
Q

70 y/o M c/o fatigue and recurrent infections. He has a 4 lb weight loss in the last 2 months and evience of increased bruising. He takes baby ASA daily for stroke prevention. The most helpful test for his symptoms is

A. CXR
B. CBC
C. CMP
D. Urinalysis
E. Platelet aggregation test
A

B. CBC

25
Q

70 y/o M c/o fatigue and recurrent infections. He has a 4 lb weight loss in the last 2 months and evience of increased bruising. He takes baby ASA daily for stroke prevention. CBC shows WBC 2.8, Hb 10.1, and platelet count of 104K. The most helpful test to evaluate his sxs is

A. Pulmonary function study
B. Platelet aggregation test
C. Hepatitis serologies
D. Bone marrow exam
E. Urine creatinine clearance
A

D. Bone marrow exam

[all 3 cell lines affected; would also look at PB smear]

26
Q

70 y/o M c/o fatigue and recurrent infections. He has a 4 lb weight loss in the last 2 months and evience of increased bruising. He takes baby ASA daily for stroke prevention. CBC shows WBC 2.8, Hb 10.1, and platelet count of 104K. Marrow exam shows refractory anemia with a few ringed sideroblasts. The next step in tx is:

A. Trial of pyridoxine
B. Vit B6 level
C. Course of decitabine
D. Course of lenalidomide
E. Multivitamin w/iron
A

B. Vit B6 level

27
Q

90 y/o F presents to discuss recent CBC that showed WBC 12,000 with increase in monocytes. Absolute monocyte count is 1250/cc. Hb and plts are normal. She is asymptomatic, has dementia, and lives with her son. You are most concerned about

A. AML
B. CMML
C. PRV
D. Myelofibrosis
E. Pyelonephritis
A

B. CMML

28
Q

90 y/o F presents to discuss recent CBC that showed WBC 12,000 with increase in monocytes. Absolute monocyte count is 1250/cc. Hb and plts are normal. She is asymptomatic, has dementia, and lives with her son. The best method to evaluate this process is:

A. Serum B12 and folate levels
B. Bone marrow exam
C. CRP level
D. CT scanning of abdomen
E. Blood and urine cultures
A

B. Bone marrow exam

29
Q

Triad of myelofibrosis

A

Leukoerythroblastic anemia

Poikilocytosis

Splenomegaly