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Published byHugo Marsh Modified over 9 years ago
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Leukocytes /mm3 Differential count: neutrophils %, eosinophils 2-4% basophils - up to 1% ly: 20 – 30%, mono 3-8% ↓ Leukopenias most often: neutropenia lymphopenia: less common – congenital ID diseases, corticosteroid therapy ↑ Proliferations : reactive – infections, other conditions neoplastic
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NEOPLASTIC PROLIFERATIONS OF WHITE CELLS
myeloid from the hematopoietic stem cells giving rise to cells of myeloid lineage thrombocytic, granulocytic, erythroid Acute myelogenous (myeloid) leukaemias Myelodysplastic syndromes Chronic myeloproliferative disorders B. lymphoid - tumors of lymphocytes, lymphomas and leukaemia Hodgkin lymphoma versus non-Hodgkin lymphomas; B- versus T- cell lymphomas precursor cells (B or T or NK) – lymphoblastic versus mature cells – B or T (or NK) C. histiocytic – proliferative lesions of histiocytes Langerhans histiocytosis
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Myelodysplastic syndrome
Bone marrow(BM) Hyper /normocellular Dysplastic – architecture, cytology Ineffective – bone marrow failure Peripheral blood (PB) - pancytopenia Blood cells: few and pathological (size, shape, function)
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Myelodysplastic syndrome
clonal disorders of stem cells defects of maturation in the BM - ineffective hematopoiesis (progressive failure of BM function) cells in the PB : decreased numbers – pancytopenia + defective in function, pathological shapes BM: hypercellular, but dysplastic: pathological forms, architecture blasts may be increased (but less than 20%, threshold AML versus MDS)
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Myelodysplastic syndrome
Clinical symptoms and complications ???
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Myelodysplastic syndrome
Clinical symptoms and complications Anemia Thrombocytopenia - bleeding Leukopenia – infection (Splenomegaly +-) Asymptomatic – one half
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Myelodysplastic syndrome
primary – de novo - old people – over 60 secondary – therapy related – toxic exposure - worse prognosis, more prone to AML
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Myelodysplastic syndrome
Subcategories Refractory anemia –– unilineage dysplasia RA with ringed sideroblasts – the nucleus encircled by siderotic granules RA with multilineage dysplasia RA with excess blasts –more than 5%, less than 20% MDS unclassifiable MDS assoc. with isolated del. (5q) chromosome
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Chronic myeloproliferative diseases
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Chronic myeloproliferative diseases
Clonal disorders Adults 1. Chronic myeloid leukemia 2. Polycythemia vera 3. Essential thrombocytemia 4. Chronic osteomyelofibrosis
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Chronic myeloproliferative diseases
Common principles: 1. Bone marrow: stem cell genetic abnormalities, neoplastic proliferation of one or more (all) BM myeloid series (red, white, megakaryocytes) disorder of an individual series more pronounced in each of the categories 2. Peripheral blood: increased numbers of cells; relatively normal maturation 3. Splenomegaly, hepatomegaly sequestration of excess blood cells, extramedullary hematopoiesis, leukaemic infiltration
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Chronic myeloproliferative diseases common features
phases of the disease in time: 1. onset insidious proliferative phase, 2. progression - spent phase osteomyelofibrosis - blast phase all can (do not have to) progress to AL; CML does it invariably)
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Chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML)
t(9; 22) – Philadelphia chromosome, bcr-abl gene pluripotent stem cell defect abnormal fusion protein - increased tyrosine kinase activity most striking : proliferation of G increased cellularity maturation retained (no hiatus leukaemicus) hematopoiesis also extramedullary splenomegaly (hepatomegaly) PB: leukocytosis – exceeds even / mm3
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CML PB: no hiatus leukaemicus;
mature neutrophils, some metamyelocytes, and a myelocyte.
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Chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML)
Phases 1. chronic – aver. 3 ys 2. accelerated – gradual failure of response to treatment, increasing anemia and thrombocytopenia, basophilia 3. blast crisis –after accelerated phase or without the acceler. phase Blast crisis = acute leukaemia - 70% myeloid, % lymphoblastic
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Chronic myeloid leukaemia
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Chronic myeloid leukaemia
uric acid deposition
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JAK2 mutation In one half of Polycythemia vera
Essential thrombocythemia Chronic myelofibrosis
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Polycythaemia vera morbus Vaquez
increased proliferation of all three series most striking: red cells hypercellular BM PB: HTC 60%, Hb over 180g/l For the diagnosis: exclude secondary polycythemia
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Polycythaemia vera increased RC mass - symptoms:
hypervolemia, blood stasis (mostly venous), cyanosis – stagnation and deoxygenation of blood hypertension, thromboses, bleeding – abnormal blood flow, abnormalities of PLT granulopoiesis may be elevated plt elevated + functional abnormalities SPENT PHASE: myelofibrosis (20%/10 ys)
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Polycythemia vera. Plethora.
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Polycythemia vera. Plethora.
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distension of retinal vessels
Polycythemia vera distension of retinal vessels
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Polycythemia vera Gout - right great toe
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Gouty tophi
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Polycythemia vera, spent phase, advanced marrow myelofibrosis.
Massive splenomegaly (3020 gm; normal: 150 to 200 gm) largely owing to extramedullary hematopoiesis
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Essential thrombocythaemia
the least common CMPD PLT exceed /mm3 BM: increased cellularity, megakaryocytes: abnormal, often large PB: PLT: often large Symptoms: thrombosis and hemorrhage – abnormalities of quantity and quality of PLT rel. indolent Giant platelets
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Essential thrombocythaemia
haemorrhages
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Essential thrombocythaemia
thrombosis, gangrene
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Chronic idiopathic myelofibrosis
Myelofibrosis with myeloid metaplasia Agnogenic myeloid metaplasia
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Chronic idiopathic myelofibrosis
abnormal neoplastic megakaryocytes release fibrogenic factors – PDGF and TGFa stimulate fibroblasts to proliferation early: BM hypercellular, minimal fibrosis progression: BM hypocellular, fibrotic; osteosclerosis obliteration of BM space: extramedullary hematopoiesis - spleen; later: liver PB: leukoerythroblastic=erytroid and granulocytic precursors 20% - progression to AML
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Primary myelofibrosis (peripheral blood smear).
Two nucleated erythroid precursors and several teardrop-shaped red cells (dacryocytes). Immature myeloid cells present in other fields. An identical picture - in other diseases producing marrow distortion and fibrosis.
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Leukaemia Acute – myeloid; lymphoblastic - B, T
Chronic – myeloid, lymphocytic – B, T
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Acute leukaemia (AL) Common: acute course
untreated: death in weeks, months Problems – symptoms result from: A. failure of normal hematopoiesis – anemia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia B. infiltration of organs by neoplastic cells 1. Myeloid (adults) 2. Lymphoblastic (young; B or T) further subdivision: genetics, morphology, immunophenotype
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Acute leukaemia
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Acute myeloid leukaemia
Categories: AML with recurrent gen. abnormalities –balanced translocations, often complete remission, favourable prognosis (fusion gene - chimeric protein); t(15;17) – AML M3 – promyelocytic – treatment with transretinoic acid; t(8; 21) or inversion of chromosome 16 AML therapy related AML with multilineage dysplasia AML – NOS- minim.differentiated Without maturation With maturation
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Acute myeloid leukaemia
FAB classification = French – American – British M0 – without maturation – myeloblastic M1 – without maturation M2 – with maturation M3 – promyelocytic – now categorised rather according to the genetics – t(15; 17) M4 – myelomonocytic M5 – a – monoblastic, b- monocytic M6 – erythroid M7 – megakaryoblastic
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Myeloid sarcoma Tumour mass of immature myeloid cells
Extramedullary (bone) Association - before or concurrently: 1. AML (or as a relapse) 2. Chronic myelogenous leukaemia other myeloproliferative disorders 3. MDS Extramedullary myeloid tumour, granulocytic sarcoma, chloroma
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Myeloid sarcoma Localization 1. Bones – subperiosteal
(skull, paranasal sinuses, sternum, ribs, vertebrae, pelvis) 2. Lymph nodes Skin Histological types A. Granulocytic B. Monoblastic C. Trilineage haematopoiesis
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Myeloid sarcoma - poorly differentiated
…a high index of suspicion... Stains: CHAE, MPO, lysozyme; CD15, CD68, CD117, CD43 (CD43 only!) Differential diagnosis 1. Lymphoblastoma 2. Burkitt lymphoma 3. Large cell lymphoma 4. Small round cell tumours (neurobl., Ewing/PNET, medullobl.) Lymphoblastoma
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Myeloid sarcoma Prognosis If + MPD, MDS = as a blast transformation
If + AML – as this AML If isolated: curative radiotherapy prolonged survival
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Precursor (lymphoblastic)B-cell neoplasms B-acute lymphoblastic leukaemia/ lymphoblastic lymphoma
1. Leukaemia (more common): involves the bone marrow and PB 2. occasionally solid primary nodal or extranodal mass /B-lymphopblastic lymphoma/ without PB and BM involevement - leukaemization possible. biologic unity of B-ALL and B-LBL, division arbitrary
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Precursor (lymphoblastic)B-cell neoplasms
Small to medium sized cells scant cytoplasm, dispersed chromatin, and inconspicuous nucleoli
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Acute lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma.
Lymphoblasts: condensed nuclear chromatin, small nucleoli, and scant agranular cytoplasm
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Lymphoblastic leukaemia
More common B B-ALL – children, but also adults; relatively frequent, good prognosis Children: 95% complete remission, 80% cured /adults worse/ Lymphoblastoma (LBL) More common: T B-LBL – rare T-LBL- rapidly growing mass in mediastinum, adolescent male
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Acute B-cell lymphoblastic leukaemia
B-ALL – children, but also adults; relatively frequent B-LBL - much less common - skin, bone, soft tissues, LN Symptoms: BM failure Enlarged LN, liver, spleen Antigenic profile:TdT, CD10 (CALLA) various degree of differentiation, B-antigens (CD79a, CD20) Genetic abnormalities– prognostically important Good: hyperdiploidy; t (12, 21) Poor: t(9, 22), hypodiploidy In general: a good prognosis leukaemia Children: 95% complete remission, 80% cured /adults worse/
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