| Literature DB >> 21317447 |
Peter Valent1, Attilio Orazi, Guntram Büsche, Annette Schmitt-Gräff, Tracy I George, Karl Sotlar, Berthold Streubel, Christine Beham-Schmid, Sabine Cerny-Reiterer, Otto Krieger, Arjan van de Loosdrecht, Wolfgang Kern, Kiyoyuki Ogata, Friedrich Wimazal, Judit Várkonyi, Wolfgang R Sperr, Martin Werner, Hans Kreipe, Hans-Peter Horny.
Abstract
The diagnosis, classification, and prognostication of patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are usually based on clinical parameters, analysis of peripheral blood and bone marrow smears, and cytogenetic determinants. However, a thorough histologic and immunohistochemical examination of the bone marrow is often required for a final diagnosis and exact classification in these patients. Notably, histology and immunohistology may reveal dysplasia in megakaryocytes or other bone marrow lineages and/or the presence of clusters of CD34-positive precursor cells. In other cases, histology may reveal an unrelated or co-existing hematopoietic neoplasm, or may support the conclusion the patient is suffering from acute myeloid leukemia rather than MDS. Moreover, histologic investigations and immunohistology may reveal an increase in tryptase-positive cells, a coexisting systemic mastocytosis, or bone marrow fibrosis, which is of prognostic significance. To discuss diagnostic algorithms, terminologies, parameters, and specific issues in the hematopathologic evaluation of MDS, a Working Conference involving a consortium of US and EU experts, was organized in June 2010. The outcomes of the conference and resulting recommendations provided by the faculty, are reported in this article. These guidelines should assist in the diagnosis, classification, and prognostication in MDS in daily practice as well as in clinical trials.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21317447 PMCID: PMC3248141 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.101104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Step-wise approach in the diagnosis, prognostication, and treatment in MDS
| MDS, myelodysplastic syndromes; FAB, French-American-British working group; WHO, world health organization; IPSS, international prognostic scoring system; WPSS, WHO-adapted prognostic scoring system. *Patient-related risk factors include variables not covered by the IPSS/WPSS, such as age or comorbidity. | |
| 1. Minimal Diagnostic Criteria | Establish the Diagnosis MDS |
| 2. FAB and WHO Classification | Establish the MDS Subtype/Variant |
| 3. IPSS, WPSS and other Scores | Establish the Risk of Transformation (AML) |
| 4. Patient-related Risk Factors* | Estimate (AML-free) Survival Times |
| 5. Therapy-related Scores | Establish the Treatment Plan |
| 6. Response Criteria | Determine Treatment Responses |
Immunohistochemical markers recommended for the evaluation of MDS
| Marker CD | Antigen | Cell Type(s) | Recommended by Faculty (Consensus Level %)* | Value/Impact in MDS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD34 | HPCA-1 | Progenitor cells, endothelial cells | 100% | RAEB-2 vs AML, hypoplastic MDS, microvessel density, megakaryoblasts |
| CD117 | KIT/SCFR | Progenitor cells, mast cells, immature erythroblasts | 90% | Mastocytosis, SM-MDS, CD34-negative clones |
| CD31 | PECAM-1 | Megakaryocytes endothelial cells | <50% | Abnormal megakaryocytes, dwarf forms Microvessel density |
| CD42 | GPIX | Megakaryocytes | 65% | Abnormal megakaryocytes, dwarf forms |
| CD61 | VNRß | Megakaryocytes | 90% | Abnormal megakaryocytes, dwarf forms |
| n.c. | Glycophorin-A/C | Erythroid cells | 65% | Erythroid hyperplasia, AML M6 vs MDS |
| n.c. | Myeloperoxidase | Myeloid cells | 70% | Neutrophilic cells, maturation defect |
| n.c. | Tryptase | Mast cells, immature basophils | 85% | Mastocytosis, SM-MDS Basophilia MDS vs MPN |
| CD14 | LPSRr | Monocytes, subset of macrophages | 95% | CMML vs MDS |
| CD68R | PGM1 | Macrophages, histiocytes, monocytes, mast cells | 55% | CMML vs MDS |
| CD3 | TCR | T cells | 85% | T cell neoplasm |
| CD20 | B1 | B cells | 85% | B cell neoplasms |
| CD25 | IL2Ralpha | Megakaryocytes, histiocytes, T cells, atypical mast cells | 85% | Abnormal megakaryocytes SM-MDS |
| 2D7 | 2D7-antigen | Basophils | 90% | Basophilia, basophilic leukemia |
Figure 1Application of lineage-associated immunohistochemical markers in MDS
Bone marrow sections obtained from patients with MDS stained with antibodies against CD34 (A, B), CD42b (C), tryptase (D), 2D7 (E), and eosinophil major basic protein, EMBP (F). The CD34 stain is useful for detection of immature precursor cells (blast cells) in patients with RAEB (A). Megakaryocytes and megakaryoblasts may also stain positive for CD34 in MDS (B). A preferred marker of the megakaryocyte lineage is, among other, CD42b (C). The tryptase stain may reveal an increase in mast cells (D), whereas 2D7 (E) is specific for basophils, and EMBP (F) is useful for the visualization of eosinophils in patients with MDS.
Figure 2Diagnostic potential of histomorphological features in MDS and delineation of MDS subtypes
A: Immunohistochemistry reveals an increase in CD34+ precursor cells in a patient with hypoplastic MDS. Note focal clustering of CD34+ precursor (blast) cells in the bone marrow section. B: The fibrotic form of MDS (MDS-F) as evidenced by Gömöri's silver stain (grade III). C: MDS associated with systemic mastcytosis (SM-MDS) as evidenced by staining the bone marrow section for mast cell tryptase. Note the compact infiltrate of spindle shaped tryptase-positive mast cells in this patient.
Impact of Myeloproliferative Features recorded in MDS & Differential Diagnoses
| Feature in Overlap-Clusters A-D* | Examples of Differential Diagnoses** |
|---|---|
| *Features are clustered according to potential differential diagnoses and involvement of certain hematopoietic lineages. When 2 or more of the features from one cluster are detected, the diagnosis MDS is in question and the more likely diagnosis is an overlap or another unrelated malignancy. **Each 3 examples of a typical differential diagnosis are depicted: a) MDS-type disease, b) MDS/X overlap, and c) another unrelated disease = without coexisting frank MDS. ***Fibrosis should be graded according to the Euro-Score.15 MDS, myelodysplastic syndromes; RARS-T, refractory anemia with ring sideroblasts and thrombocytosis; MDS/MPN, myeldysplastic/myeloproliferative overlap disorder; CFU-GM, granulocyte/macrophage colony-forming unit; MDS-U, unclassifiable MDS; MDS-eo, MDS with marked eosinophilia; PDGFR, platelet derived growth factor; SM, systemic mastocytosis; CMML, chronic myelomonocytic leukemia; AML, acute myeloid leukemia, SSM, smouldering SM. | |
| A: MEGA/FIBRO-Cluster | a) 5q- syndrome or RARS-T |
| B: EO/BASO-Cluster | a) MDS-U, MDS-eo |
| C: MAST CELL-Cluster | a) MDS with increase in mast cells |
| D: MONO-Cluster | a) MDS with mild monocytosis |
Figure 3Evaluation of CD34+ cells in the MDS marrow by Tissue-FAXS
A. Percentage of CD34+ cells in the bone marrow of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), MDS subtype RAEB, and MDS subtype RARS. The percentage of CD34+ cells was determined (estimated) in CD34-stained bone marrow sections by microscopy (black bars) as well as by TissueFAXS using HistoFAXS software (grey bars) in blinded fashion. As visible, there was an excellent correlation when comparing the two techniques of quantification of CD34+ progenitor cells. B:.Correlation of CD34+ cell counts in all patients (correlation coefficient R=0.99).
Comparison of Criteria Defining Idiopathic Cytopenia of Unknown Significance (ICUS) and Idiopathic Dysplasia of Unknown Significance (IDUS)
| Diagnosis/Condition | Defining Criteria | Additional Features |
|---|---|---|
| MDS, myelodysplastic syndromes; EPO, erythropoietin; FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridization; BM, bone marrow. *constant: at least 6 months: marked: hemoglobin <10 g/dL, neutrophils <1,000/μL blood, platelets <100,000/μL; **diagnostic dysplasia: ≥10% of cells in one or more major hematopoietic lineages; karyotypes typically found in MDS; it is important to note that the diagnosis IDUS should only be established when clear signs of dysplasia in at least two hematopoietic lineages are detectable. ***if one or more co-criteria are found in suspected MDS, the condition should be termed “highly suspicious for MDS”. | ||
| ICUS | Constant marked cytopenia* | elderly patients EPO levels low FISH may reveal a small MDS-clone in the bone marrow |
| IDUS | No constant marked cytopenia* | often young patients usually detected in a routine blood test (e.g. ‘Pelger forms’ or macrocytosis) |