Title: Myeloproliferative Neoplasms
1Myeloproliferative Neoplasms
- Teresa Kraus MD
- Teresa-Kraus_at_ouhsc.edu
Modified from a lecture by Dr. William Kern
2Downloading this presentation or using any of the
diagrams, charts or photographs for any purpose
other than studying for the Blood-Hematopoiesis-Ly
mphatics course is prohibited.
3The Myeloproliferative Neoplasms (MPNs)
- Clonal proliferations of pluripotent
hematopoietic stem cells or very early precursors - Maturation maintained
- Increased numbers of predominantly mature,
normal-appearing cells - Variable predisposition to transform to acute
leukemia or myelofibrosis
4The Myeloproliferative Neoplasms
- Chronic myelogenous leukemia, BCR-ABL1 (CML)
- Polycythemia vera (P. vera)
- Essential thrombocythemia (ET)
- Primary myelofibrosis (PMF)
P. vera, ET and PMF are sometimes grouped
together as the Philadelphia-negative MPNs
These are the 4 most common there are others.
52008 WHO Classification of Myeloproliferative
Neoplasms
- Chronic myelogenous leukemia, BCR-ABL1
- Polycythemia vera
- Primary myelofibrosis
- Essential thrombocythemia
- Chronic neutrophilic leukemia
- Chronic eosinophilic leukemia, NOS
- Mastocytosis
- Myeloproliferative neoplasm, unclassifiable
(Rearranged)
6Myeloproliferative Neoplasms
Disease Predominant Cells
- CML Granulocytes
- P. vera Erythrocytes
- ET Platelets
- PMF Fibroblasts (driven by
megakaryocytes)
There can be overlap between the MPNs
7Myeloproliferative Neoplasms
- Can be difficult to distinguish from each other
- Chronic myeloid leukemia has cytogenetic/molecular
hallmark - Philadelphia chromosome t(922)
- Others have no specific chromosomal abnormality
- Chromosomal abnormalities occur, but variable and
not specific - May have a recurrent molecular abnormality JAK2
mutation
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9Tyrosine Kinases
- Key regulators in signaling pathways
- Critical in cell proliferation, differentiation
and other functions - Many hematopoietic growth factor receptors are
tyrosine kinases, or activate tyrosine kinases,
or both - Many oncogenes are tyrosine kinases
10Tyrosine Kinases Growth Factor Receptors
11Tyrosine Kinases
- Abnormalities in tyrosine kinases critical in
MPNs - CML BCR-ABL1 rearrangement
- Other MPNs JAK2 mutation
- JAK2 Janus kinase
- Mutation JAK2 V167F
- Found in varying proportions of other MPNs
(excluding CML) - P. vera gt PMF ET
12Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia
- 20 of all leukemias in U.S.
- Increasing incidence with age
- Peak age 50
- However Occurs at all ages
- Men gt Women (1.5 1)
Also called chronic granulocytic leukemia (CGL)
13CML Pathophysiology
- Philadelphia chromosome (Ph) t(922)
- ABL gene on chromosome 9 translocated to BCR gene
on 22 - BCR/ABL1 fusion gene formed
You have to know this.
Note t(922) is not specific for CML it may
also be found in acute lymphoblastic
leukemia (ALL)
14CML Molecular Pathogenesis
- ABL Tyrosine kinase involved in cell-cell
signaling - BCR-ABL fusion protein More potent tyrosine
kinase than normal ABL protein - Different breakpoints on BCR give different
proteins - p210 Majority of typical CML
- p190 Most Ph-positive ALL rare CML AML
15Philadelphia Chromosome (t922)BCR-ABL
Rearrangement
ASH Image Bank
16BCR-ABL Alternative Splicing
- Different breakpoint sites on BCR gene result in
different BCR-ABL fusion protein sizes - p210 Protein typically seen in CML
- p190 Protein typically seen in
Philadelphia-positive ALL - More potent tyrosine kinase than p210
- p230 Less potent tyrosine kinase more indolent
disease
p210 versus p190 might appear on the USMLE
17CML Phases of Disease
- Chronic Phase
- Accelerated Phase
- Blast Crisis
Occasional cases evolve into burnt out,
fibrotic phase
18CML Chronic Phase
- Most common stage at diagnosis
- Typically lasted 3-4 years
- May last lt1 year, or gt15 years
- Eventually transforms into more aggressive phase
- Directly into blast crisis, or
- Accelerated phase, then blast crisis
Natural history of the disease prior to Gleevec
19CML Chronic Phase Characteristics
- Marked granulocytosis
- Splenomegaly
- May have systemic or hypermetabolic symptoms
- Fever, night sweats, weight loss
- Hyperuricemia gouty arthritis, renal stones
20CML Chronic Phase Blood
- WBC 20,000 to gt500,000/mL
- All stages of granulocyte maturation
- Predominance of myelocytes segs
- Myeloblasts rare (usually 3 at diagnosis)
- Basophilia invariably present
- Thrombocytosis common
- May exceed 1,000,000/mL
- Mild anemia common
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23CML Differential Diagnosis
- Reactive process (leukemoid reaction)
- Other myeloproliferative neoplasms
- Leukoerythroblastic reaction due to
space-occupying lesion in marrow - Atypical CML No Ph or BCR/ABL rearrangement
24CML Confirming the Diagnosis
- Typical CBC blood smear
- Splenomegaly
- Decreased leukocyte alkaline phosphatase (LAP)
score - Increased serum vitamin B12 level
- Presence of Ph and/or BCR/ABL rearrangement
Demonstration of Ph or BCR/ABL rearrangement is
mandatory
LAP score might up on exams.
25Demonstration of BCR/ABL rearrangement
- PCR-based test on blood
- Currently the usual method
- Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH)
- Standard cytogenetics
- Philadelphia chromosome (t(922)
- May detect variant translocations not detected by
PCR test
Demonstration of a Ph or BCR/ABL is mandatory for
the diagnosis of CML!!
26Demonstration of BCR/ABL rearrangement
27CML Accelerated Phase
- Systemic symptoms not due to infection
- Progressive splenomegaly
- Increasing WBC not controlled by medication
- Marked basophilia (gt20)
- Thrombocytopenia (not due to medication)
- Increased blasts (5-19) in blood or marrow
- Marked marrow fibrosis
Any of these can indicate progression to
accelerated phase
28CML Blast Crisis
- Definition gt20 blasts in blood and/or marrow
- Most have myeloid phenotype
- Resemble AML
- 30 have lymphoid phenotype
- Resemble acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- Usually precursor B-cell
- Survival after onset of blast crisis 3-6 months
29CML Blast Crisis
30CML Chronic Phase Treatment
- Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs)
- Gleevec (imatinib mesylate)
- Dasatinib, nilotinib
- Hydroxyurea
- Interferon-a
- Bone marrow (stem cell) transplant
31CML Gleevec
- Inhibits BCR/ABL tyrosine kinase
- Taken orally usually well tolerated
- High hematologic response rate
- Does not appear to be curative (?)
- Resistance can develop
- Dasatinib nilotinib New tyrosine kinase
inhibitors - May be effective for patients who develop
resistance to Gleevec
32Monitoring Gleevec Therapy for CML
- Periodic monitoring is required
- Quantitative PCR-based test on blood is usually
used - Follow absolute level of BCR-ABL transcript and
trend up or down - Periodic bone marrow examinations done for
standard cytogenetics
Not for memorization
33Response to TKIs Favorable Prognostic Factors
- Rapid response to therapy
- Major cytogenetic response (marked decrease in
Ph metaphases) - Complete cytogenetic response is ideal
- Major molecular response (marked decrease in
BCR-ABL transcript levels in marrow)
For information, not memorization
34Resistance to Gleevec
- Some BCR-ABL fusion genes have mutations which
make them resistant to Gleevec - Mutations may be present at diagnosis, or may
develop while on therapy - Some of these mutations sensitive to dasatinib or
nilotinib - A few mutations not sensitive to any currently
available TKI
35CML Bone Marrow Transplant
- Allogeneic stem cell transplant only proven
curative therapy - Formerly treatment of choice for young patients
- Best done early in chronic phase
- Results worse in accelerated phase or blast
crisis
Now largely replaced by tyrosine kinase
inhibitors as first-line therapy
36CML Treatment of Accelerated Phase or Blast
Crisis
- Accelerated phase or blast crisis treated as
acute leukemia - Myeloid blast crisis treated as AML
- Lymphoid blast crisis treated as ALL
- May induce second chronic phase
- Bone marrow transplant may be tried
- Overall results poor
37Polycythemia Vera Features
- Marked increase in red cell mass
- Increased RBC count, hemoglobin, hematocrit
- Splenomegaly (usually moderate)
- Predisposition to thromboembolic events
- Transformation to AML (uncommon) or burnt out
fibrotic stage
38Definitions I
- Polycythemia Increase in RBC mass
- Erythrocytosis Increase in RBCs per unit volume
- Increase in total RBC mass (absolute
erythrocytosis polycythemia), or - Decrease in plasma volume (relative
erythrocytosis pseudopolycythemia)
39Definitions II
- Primary polycythemia (P. vera)
- Independent of erythropoietin
- Secondary polycythemia EPO driven
- Physiologically appropriate
- Driven by hypoxemia
- Physiologically inappropriate
- Increased EPO due to renal cysts, tumors
40P. Vera Epidemiology
- Uncommon, but not very rare
- Slight male predominance
- Older age group Majority of cases between 60 to
80 - Caucasians gt African-Americans
41P. Vera JAK2
- Believed that all cases of P. vera related to
mutation in JAK2 gene - Most JAK2-V617F
- Often homozygous
- Remainder Mutation elsewhere in JAK2 gene
- Low EPO level can be surrogate for JAK2 mutation
This is important.
42P. Vera Symptoms
- Increased blood viscosity
- Headache, dizziness, tinnitus, visual
disturbances, dyspnea, weakness - Splenomegaly
- Abdominal discomfort or swelling
- Thrombotic complications
- Bleeding from mucous membranes or into skin
(ecchymoses)
43P. Vera Symptoms
- Pruritis
- Hyperuricemia Gouty arthritis, kidney stones
- Erythromelalgia Reddening, swelling pain in
digits - Seen with very high platelet counts
- More common in essential thrombocythemia
44P. Vera Gastrointestinal System
- Predisposition to peptic ulcer, GI bleeding,
thrombosis of mesenteric vessels - Massive hemorrhage from varices in esophagus,
stomach or bowel may occur - May have hepatic vein thrombosis (Budd-Chiari
syndrome)
45P. Vera Central Nervous System
- Headache, vertigo, syncopal episodes, numbness or
tingling in fingers - Visual disturbances
- Strokes
- CNS vascular lesions most serious complication
of PV - 10 of deaths
46P. Vera Physical Exam
- Ruddy skin 70
- Splenomegaly 70
- Hepatomegaly 40
- Hypertension 70
- Red or dark blotches on skin
- Dilated or engorged retinal vessels
47P. Vera CBC Smear
- Hemoglobin may be up to 18-24 g/dL
- RBC count Commonly 7-10 x 106/mL
- Hematocrit Typically gt60 for men, gt55 for
women - Erythrocyte morphology normal
- May have mild anisocytosis microcytosis
The blood smear usually isnt very exciting
48P. Vera CBC Smear
- Leukocytosis common (50)
- Predominantly mature granulocytes
- Basophils may be slightly increased
- Thrombocytosis common (80)
49P. Vera Diagnosis
- Hemoglobin gt18.5 g/dL in men, gt16.5 g/dL in
women, or other evidence of increased RBC volume - Presence of JAK2 V617F or other functionally
similar mutation - Bone marrow biopsy showing hypercellularity with
trilineage growth - Serum EPO level below reference range
50P. Vera Natural History
- Median survival gt10 years (treated)
- Main problems
- Increased blood viscosity
- Predisposition to thrombosis
- Less common progression to AML or burnt out
fibrotic phase - Fibrotic phase resembles primary myelofibrosis
51P. Vera Treatment
- Phlebotomy is cornerstone of treatment
- Controls red cell mass by inducing iron
deficiency - May be only therapy required
- Others
- Hydroxyurea
- Radioactive phosphorous (32P)
- Interferon-a
52Secondary Polycythemia
- Physiologically appropriate
- Due to decreased tissue oxygenation
- Causes
- High altitude
- Pulmonary disease
- Cyanotic congenital heart disease
- Carbon monoxide poisoning
- Hypoventilation syndromes
- Abnormal hemoglobin (high O2 affinity)
53Aberrant EPO Production or Response
- Physiologically inappropriate
- Causes
- Tumors, renal cysts, hemangiomas
- Androgen abuse
- Erythropoietin abuse (blood doping)
- Familial polycythemia
54Essential Thrombocythemia (ET)
- Marked increase in megakaryocytes platelet mass
- Predisposition to thrombotic and hemorrhagic
events - Generally indolent course
- Transformation to acute leukemia uncommon, but
occurs
55ET Epidemiology
- Uncommon, but not very rare
- Predominantly older population
- Men women
- Frequent occurrence in young women described in
some series
56ET Clinical Manifestations
- Many patients asymptomatic
- Major clinical manifestations usually related to
thrombosis - May have bleeding (less common)
57ET Thrombosis
- Arterial gt venous
- Small vessels (arterioles) gtgt large vessels
- Any system in body can be affected
- Neurologic distal extremities most commonly
involved
58ET Neurologic Manifestations
- Headache
- Paresthesias
- Transient ischemic attacks
- Unsteadiness, dysarthria, hemiparesis, amaurosis
fugax, others - May progress to definitive cerebral infarcts
59ET Small Vessel Involvement
- Microvascular events involving fingers toes
common - Digital pain, increased by warmth
- Gangrene of digits
- Erythromelalgia Redness, duskiness burning
pain in extremities - Dramatic relief with aspirin
60ET Small Vessel Involvement
61ET Thrombotic Manifestations
- Partial correlation between platelet count
thrombotic manifestations - Higher count associated with higher risk
- Risk factors for thrombosis
- Older age (gt60 years)
- History of previous thrombotic disease
- Smoking
Young patients with no other risk factors or
previous history of thrombotic episodes have
relatively low risk of thrombotic events
62ET Hemorrhagic Manifestations
- Tends to occur with high platelet counts (gt106
platelets/mL) - Bleeding is generally mild
- GI tract most common site of bleeding
- Other sites skin, eyes, urinary tract, gums,
joints, brain
63ET Differential Diagnosis
- Reactive thrombocytosis
- Other chronic myeloproliferative neoplasms
- Pseudothrombocythemia
- WBC fragments (leukemia), schistocytes,
microspherocytes (severe thalassemia)
Must exclude chronic myeloid leukemia (CML)!
64Causes of Reactive Thrombocytosis
- Infections
- Inflammation of any type
- Malignancy (non-hematologic)
- Trauma
- Blood loss or iron deficiency
- Splenectomy or hyposplenic state
- Hemolysis
- Rebound after thrombocytopenia of any cause
65Thrombocytosis in MPNs
- Marked thrombocytosis can be seen in any of the
MPNs - Platelet count cannot be used to differentiate ET
from other MPNs - CML is a more common cause of marked
thrombocytosis than is ET - CML must always be excluded in patient with
possible ET!
66ET CBC Blood Smear
- Threshold platelet count gt450,000/mL
- May be gt1,000,000/mL
- Leukocytosis common
- Mostly mature granulocytes
- Mild basophilia occasional immature
granulocytes may be present - Hemoglobin usually normal
- Giant bizarre platelets on smear
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68ET Treatment
- First question Who to treat?
- Older patient (gt60 years) or patient with
previous thrombotic episodes treat - Young (lt40 years), asymptomatic patient May not
require treatment - In between, asymptomatic controversial
69ET Treatment
- Control of platelet count reduces both thrombotic
hemorrhagic complications - Treatment options
- Hydroxyurea
- Aspirin
- Interferon-a
- Anagrelide
- Plateletpheresis
70ET Anagrelide
- Inhibits megakaryocyte maturation
- Lowers platelet coount
- Main side effects are due to vasodilation and
inotropic effects - Headache
- Fluid retention
- Palpitations
- May be less effective than hydroxyurea
71Primary Myelofibrosis (PMF)
- Fibrosis in marrow (myelofibrosis)
- Leukoerythroblastic reaction in blood
- Nucleated RBCs, teardrop RBCs, immature
granulocytes - Splenomegaly, often massive
- Extramedullary hematopoiesis
Formerly chronic idiopathic myelofibrosis (CIMF)
72PMF Pathophysiology
- Excessive production of growth factors by
neoplastic megakaryocytes and other cells - Growth factors stimulate fibroblast proliferation
and production of collagen - Fibroblasts are not part of malignant clone
73PMF Synonyms
- Chronic Idiopathic Myelofibrosis (CIMF)
- Agnogenic Myeloid Metaplasia (AMM)
- Myelofibrosis with Myeloid Metaplasia (MMM)
- Many others
74PMF Epidemiology
- Uncommon, but not very rare
- Predominantly older population
- Male female (?)
- Possible etiologic factors
- Ionizing radiation
- Organic solvents (benzene, toluene)
- No obvious underlying cause in most cases
75PMF Clinical Features
- Fatigue due to anemia
- Abdominal discomfort, early satiety due to
splenomegaly - Bleeding Petechiae purpura to hematemesis from
gastroesophageal varices
76PMF CBC
- Anemia common
- WBC variable
- Leukocytosis in 1/3rd
- Leukopenia in 10-25
- Platelets Decreased in 1/3rd increased in
10-15
77PMF Blood Smear
- Leukoerythroblastic reaction with teardrop RBCs
- Nucleated RBCs
- Granulocyte precursors, including occasional
blasts - Megakaryocyte fragments giant platelets
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80PMF Bone Marrow
- Usually dry tap (no aspirate)
- Fibrosis (may be subtle at first)
- Cellularity Initially increased (cellular
phase) later decreased - Marked increase in megakaryocytes
- Osteosclerosis may develop late
81Bone marrow biopsy H E stain
82Bone marrow biopsy Reticulin stain
83PMF Differential Diagnosis
- Other MPNs
- Metastatic neoplasms Carcinoma, lymphoma
- Infections Tuberculosis, fungi
- Other granulomatous diseases
- Hairy cell leukemia
- Others
84PMF Clinical Course
- Median survival 5 years
- Younger patients without anemia may have
prolonged survival - Causes of death
- Infection
- Acute leukemic transformation (5-20)
- Heart failure
- Hemorrhage
85PMF Treatment
- Treatment is usually palliative
- Correct reversible factors Iron, folate
deficiencies - RBC platelet transfusions as needed
- Splenectomy (?)
- Interferon-a
- Stem cell transplant (experimental)
86Summary JAK2 in MPNs
87Ruxolitinib (JakafiTM)
- JAK2 inhibitor recently licensed for use in
intermediate or high-risk PMF - Also for fibrosis following ET or P. vera
- Decreases splenomegaly improves symptoms
- High incidence of hematologic side effects
- Does not cure disease
Will not appear on the USMLE
88CML Summary
- Marked increase in granulocytes
- Philadelphia chromosome t(922) BCR-ABL
- Predisposition to transform to acute leukemia
(usually AML) Blast crisis - Miracle drug Gleevec
- Inhibits BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase
- Dasatinib nilotinib are newer, more potent
alternatives
89Polycythemia Vera Summary
- Production of excess RBCs
- Associated with mutation in JAK2 gene (JAK
Janus kinase) - Main risk thrombosis
- Less common acute leukemic transformation,
myelofibrosis - Treatment Phlebotomy hydroxyurea
90Essential Thrombocythemia
- Marked increase in platelets
- JAK2 mutation in 50 of cases
- Main risk thrombosis
- Bleeding less common
- Leukemic transformation, myelofibrosis less
common - Main treatments Aspirin, hydroxyurea, Anagrelide
(?)
91Primary Myelofibrosis
- Fibrosis in marrow extramedullary hematopoiesis
in spleen - JAK2 mutation in 50
- Main risk Bone marrow failure (cytopenias)
- Significant risk of acute leukemic transformation
- Treatment primarily supportive (now)
92MyeloDYSPLASTIC / myeloPROLIFERATIVE NEOPLASMS
For Reference ONLY
93Myelodysplastic/Myeloproliferative Neoplasms
- New category of diseases in WHO classification
- Features of both myelodysplasia and
myeloproliferative neoplasms - Increased cell counts
- Abnormal cell appearances (dysplasia)
For reference only
94Myelodysplastic/Myeloproliferative Neoplasms
- Atypical (Ph-negative) chronic myeloid leukemia
(aCML) - Chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML)
- Juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML)
- MDS/MPN unclassifiable
For reference only
95Atypical (Ph-negative) CML
- Granulocytosis fewer immature cells
- Basophilia absent
- Dysplastic changes present
- By definition, no Ph or BCR/ABL rearrangement
- Survival worse than typical, Ph1-() CML
Has no relationship to true, Ph-positive CML!!
96Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukemia
- Previously classified as myelodysplastic syndrome
- Monocytosis in blood marrow
- Dysplastic changes frequent
- WBC count may be high or low
- Hepatosplenomegaly
- Survival generally poor
For reference only
97Juvenile Myelomonocytic Leukemia
- Usually children lt 4 years old
- Boys gt girls
- Common features
- Monocytosis
- Hepatosplenomegaly
- Tissue infiltration by monocytes
- Dysplastic changes in marrow
- Erythrocytes have fetal characteristics
- Association with neurofibromatosis type 1
For reference only
98Juvenile Myelomonocytic Leukemia
- Clinical course heterogeneous
- Majority of cases aggressive
- Median survival lt 1 year
- Most die from bone marrow failure or organ
failure due to infiltration by monocytes
For reference only