Haematology 7: Myelodysplastic Syndrome Flashcards

1
Q

What are the haematological features of Myelodysplastic syndrome ?

A

Cytopaenias
Qualitative abnormalities of erythrocytes, myelocytes and megakaryocytes maturation
increased risk of transformation into leukaemia

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2
Q

Name the characteristic bilobed neutrophil seen in MDS ?

A

Pseudo Pelger-huet anomaly

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3
Q

List some abnormal cells seen with microscopy in MDS ?

A

Pseudo Pelger huet neutrophils (bilobed)
Dysgranulosis of neutrophils
Dyserythropoiesis of red cells
Ringed sideroblasts - iron granules visible
Micro megakaryocytes ( dysplastic megakaryocytes)
Increased proportion of blast cells in marrow
Myeloblasts with auer rods (also feature of AML)

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4
Q

Which disease does MDS often progress to ?

A

AML

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5
Q

Which drug can be used to treat MDS 5q- syndrome ?

A

Lenalidomide

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6
Q

List 3 Primary causes of bone marrow failure ?

A

Fanconi’s anaemia
Diamond blackfan anaemia
Kostmann’s syndrome
Acquired: idiopathic aplastic anaemia

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7
Q

Which 2 antibiotics can cause bone marrow failure ?

A

Chloramphenicol

Sulphonamide

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8
Q

How is fanconi anaemia inherited ?

A

Mainly autosomal recessive but some are X linked

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9
Q

List 4 congenital abnormalities seen in children with Fanconi anaemia ?

A

Absent radii
Abnormal thumbs
Cafe au lait spots
Short stature

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10
Q

What is the pathognomonic triad of clinical signs of Dyskeratosis Congenital (DC)?

A

Skin pigmentation
Nail dystrophy
Leukoplakia

These children look very old! The disease causes premature aging

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11
Q

What is the genetic cause of Dyskeratosis congenita ?

A

Mutation in Genes that encode proteins involved in maintenance of telomerases. These telomerases get shortened at the ends. This causes premature ageing

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12
Q

define myelodysplastic syndrome

A

biologically heterogeneous group of acquired haematopoietic stem cell disorders
characterised by development of a clone of marrow stem cells with abnormal maturation resulting in:
- functionally defective blood cells
- numerical reduction
usually elderly
develops over weeks/months

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13
Q

prognosis of patients with MDS

A

1/3 die from infection
1/3 die from bleeding
1/3 die from acute leukaemia

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14
Q

treatment options for MDS

A

allogenic stem cell transplant
intensive chemotherapy
supportive - blood products, antimicrobial, growth factors
biological modifiers - immunosuppressive agents, azacytidine, decitabine, lanalidomide
oral chemotherapy - hydroxyurea/hydroxycarbamide
low dose chemo - subcutaneous low-dose cytarabine
intensive chemo/stem cell transplant - for high risk MDS - AML-type regimes

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15
Q

secondary causes of bone marrow failure

A
marrow infiltration 
haematological malignancies (leukaemias, lymphomas)
non-haematological (solid tumours)
radiation 
drugs
chemicals (eg benzene)
AI 
infection (parovirus, viral hepatitis)
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16
Q

what drugs can cause bone marrow failure

A

predictable - cytotoxic drugs
idiosyncratic - phenylbutazone, gold salts
antibiotics - chloramphenicol, sulphonamide
diuretics - thiazides
antithyroid drugs - carbimazole

17
Q

what is aplastic anaemia

A

deficiency of RBC, WBC, and platelets
all age groups affected
bimodal incidence - 15-24, 60+

18
Q

what are the different types of aplastic anaemia

A
most = idiopathic 
inherited = dyskeratosis congenita, fanconi anaemia, schwachman- diamond syndrome 
secondary = radiation, drugs, hepatitis viruses, SLE
19
Q

describe the clinical presentation of bone marrow failure

A

anaemia - fatigue, breathlessmess
leucopaenia - infections
thrombocytopeania - bleeding/ bruising

20
Q

how is aplastic anameia diagnosed

A

peripheral blood - cytopeania

bone marrow - hypocellular

21
Q

what are the two subtypes of aplastic anaemia

A

severe aplastic anaemia (SAA)

non-severe aplastic anaemia (NSAA)

22
Q

what is the camitta criteria for severe aplastic anaemia

A

2/3 peripheral blood features

  • reticulocytes <1% (<20 x 109/l)
  • neutrophils <0.5 x 109/l
  • platelets <20 x 109/l
23
Q

how is bone marrow failure managed

A
seek and remove cause 
supportive - blood transfusion/ platelet transfusion 
iron chelation therapy 
immunosuppressive therapy 
SC transplant (younger patients)
24
Q

describe features of fanconi anaemia

A
most common AA
autosomal recessive/ x linked
multiple mutated genes involved 
gene mutations result in:
- abnormalities in DNA repair 
- chromosomal fragility 
- breakage in the presence of in vitro mitomycin/ diepoxybutane
25
Q

what are clinical features of fanconi anaemia

A
short stature
hypopigmented spots and cafe au lait spots 
abnormality of thumbs 
microcephaly or hydrocephaly 
hypogonadism 
developmental delay 
no abnormalities in 30%
26
Q

list complications of fanconi anaemia

A
aplastic anaemia 
leukaemia
liver disease 
myelodysplasoa
cancer (epithelial)
27
Q

what is dyskaryosis congenita

A

inherited disorder characterised by:

  • marrow failure
  • cancer predisposition
  • somatic abnormalities
28
Q

how do patients with dyskaryosis congenita present

A

skin pigmentation
nail dystrophy
leukoplakia

29
Q

list somatic abnormalities/complications in DC

A

abnormal skin pigmentation
nail dystrophy
BM failure
leukoplakia

30
Q

what is the genetic basis of dyskaryosis congenita

A

telomere shortening
3 patterns of inhetritance:
- X-linked recessive (most common) - mutant DKC1 gene leads to ineffective telomere functioning
- Autosomal dominant - mutant TREC gene - encodes RNA component of telomerase
- Autosomal recessive - ? mutant gene

31
Q

what is the function of telomeres

A

prevent chromosomal fusion or rearrangements during chromosomal replication
protects genes at end of chromosomes from degrading
telomere length reduced in BM failure diseases

32
Q

how is severe aplastic anaemia treated

A

age <35:
- HLA identical sibling donor/child or unrelated donor
age 35-50:
- HLA donor or horse anti-thymocyte gobulin (ATG_ + ciclosporin) - unrelated HCA donor/ eltrombopag + 2nd ATG