Myelodysplasia: not quite leukemia
Myelodysplasia (MDS) is often thought of as “pre-leukemia.” Which is kind of misleading, because only some cases of MDS go on to become leukemia; others stay the same and never progress.
In MDS, there is some sort of abnormality in a myeloid stem cell. If you look at the cells in the blood and bone marrow, you’ll see dysmyelopoiesis (the red cells, neutrophils and/or megakaryocytes look abnormal). The neutrophils in the blood often show dysgranulopoiesis (they lack specific granulation) or hypolobulation (there are only a couple segments to the nucleus – or sometimes no segments at all, just a single round nucleus). Check out the neutrophil in the photo above: the cytoplasm is almost clear (certainly not nice and fawn-pink like you’d expect for a segmented neutrophil), and the nucleus doesn’t have nice segments – just a couple poorly-defined lobes.
In addition to the dysmyelopoietic changes, most cases show a macrocytic anemia. This is an important diagnostic feature, and an easy one to remember. If you see an older patient with a macrocytic anemia, MDS is something you should keep in mind (in addition to the more common causes of a macrocytic anemia, such as B12/folate deficiency and ethanol ingestion).
There may be an increase in myeloblasts in the blood or bone marrow – but if so, it’s a small increase (and certainly not more than 20%, which is the cutoff for acute myeloid leukemia).
There are actually a bunch of different kinds of MDS, everything from refractory anemia (which is just what it sounds like: anemia that does not respond to therapy such as B12 or iron) to chronic myelomonocytic leukemia in transformation (which is a bad name, actually, because it’s a type of MDS, not technically a leukemia). You should not try to memorize these subtypes unless you plan to take your hematopathology boards soon (or unless you have a particularly sadistic pathology professor).
The treatment depends on the type of MDS. Lower-grade types (like refractory anemia) rarely transform into acute leukemia, so they are treated more conservatively. Higher-grade types (like chronic myelomonocytic leukemia in transformation) may be treated more aggressively, particularly if they occur in a younger person who can handle chemotherapy well.
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- Kristine Krafts, M.D. Assistant Professor, Department of Pathology University of Minnesota School of Medicine April 2013: 78,614 unique visitors.
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- Kristine said 1. Yes – in some books it does. It’s not a true cause of an elevated MCV, but there you...
- Kristine said Hi Ari – Thanks! You can find an article describing the 2008 WHO revisions here: http://bloodj...
- Dr. Mehmood-ul-Hasan said This is really a great concept, which (usually) the physicians do not know. A haematologist should d...
- Ari said Thanks a lot for those nice informations Can I ask for the new WHO lymphoma classifications book or...
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- jules said woohoo! med student…revising…couldn’t remember the whole bilirubin situ…foun...
- divakar said excellent………studying these two words for last 5 years but doesnt know the concept....
- Kristine said Yes – the mature appearing neutrophils in CML are part of the malignant population! The LAP is...
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In our lab, we do cytogenetics and FISH in bone narrow. Most of the time there are typical cromosomes involved with the MDS, the most frecuent: del(5q), del(7q), +8, del(20q).
really helpful post and a great site!
greetings from hungary
SO,MACROCYTOSIS AND HYPOSEGMENTED NEUTROPHILS IN MDS.NICE POINT