| Literature DB >> 27013026 |
Johanna Svahn1, Francesca Bagnasco2, Enrico Cappelli1, Daniela Onofrillo3, Silvia Caruso2, Fabio Corsolini4, Daniela De Rocco5, Anna Savoia5, Daniela Longoni6, Marta Pillon7, Nicoletta Marra8, Ugo Ramenghi9, Piero Farruggia10, Anna Locasciulli11, Carmen Addari12, Carla Cerri13, Elena Mastrodicasa13, Gabriella Casazza14, Federico Verzegnassi15, Francesca Riccardi1, Riccardo Haupt2, Angelica Barone16, Simone Cesaro17, Chiara Cugno18, Carlo Dufour1.
Abstract
We analyzed 97 Fanconi anemia patients from a clinic/biological database for genotype, somatic, and hematologic phenotype, adverse hematological events, solid tumors, and treatment. Seventy-two patients belonged to complementation group A. Eighty percent of patients presented with mild/moderate somatic phenotype and most with cytopenia. No correlation was seen between somatic/hematologic phenotype and number of missense mutations of FANCA alleles. Over follow-up, 33% of patients improved or maintained mild/moderate cytopenia or normal blood count, whereas remaining worsened cytopenia. Eleven patients developed a hematological adverse event (MDS, AML, pathological cytogenetics) and three developed solid tumors. 10 years cumulative risk of death of the whole cohort was 25.6% with median follow-up 5.8 years. In patients eligible to hematopoietic stem cell transplantation because of moderate cytopenia, mortality was significantly higher in subjects transplanted from matched unrelated donor over nontransplanted subjects, whereas there was no significant difference between matched sibling donor transplants and nontransplanted patients. In patients eligible to transplant because of severe cytopenia and clonal disease, mortality risk was not significantly different in transplanted from matched unrelated versus matched sibling donor versus nontransplanted subjects. The decision to transplant should rely on various elements including, type of donor, HLA matching, patient comorbidities, impairment, and clonal evolution of hematopoiesis. Am. J. Hematol. 91:666-671, 2016.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27013026 DOI: 10.1002/ajh.24373
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hematol ISSN: 0361-8609 Impact factor: 10.047