| Literature DB >> 28725989 |
Mohamad Jawhar1,2, Nicole Naumann1,2, Juliana Schwaab1,2, Herrad Baurmann3, Jochen Casper4, Tu-Anh Dang5, Lutz Dietze6, Konstanze Döhner7, Annette Hänel8, Bernd Lathan9, Hartmut Link10, Sina Lotfi11, Ole Maywald12, Stephan Mielke13, Lothar Müller14, Uwe Platzbecker15, Otto Prümmer16, Henrike Thomssen17, Karin Töpelt18, Jens Panse19, Tom Vieler20, Wolf-Karsten Hofmann1,2, Torsten Haferlach21, Claudia Haferlach21, Alice Fabarius1,2, Andreas Hochhaus22, Nicholas C P Cross23,24, Andreas Reiter25,26, Georgia Metzgeroth1,2.
Abstract
We evaluated clinical characteristics and outcome on imatinib of 22 patients with myeloid/lymphoid neoplasms with eosinophilia and rearrangement of PDGFRB. Median age was 49 years (range 20-80), 91% were male. Fifteen different PDGFRB fusion genes were identified. Eosinophilia was absent in 4/19 (21%) cases and only 11/19 (58%) cases had eosinophils ≥1.5×109/L. On imatinib, 17/17 (100%) patients in chronic phase achieved complete hematologic remission after median 2 months (range 0-13). Complete cytogenetic remission and/or complete molecular remission by RT-PCR were achieved in 12/13 (92%) and 12/14 patients (86%) after median 10 (range 3-34) and 19 months (range 7-110), respectively. In patients with blast phase (myeloid, n = 2; lymphoid, n = 3), treatment included combinations of imatinib (n = 5), intensive chemotherapy (n = 3), and/or allogeneic stem cell transplantation (n = 3). All 3 transplanted patients (complex karyotype, n = 2) experienced early relapse. Initially, patients were treated with imatinib 400 mg/day (n = 15) or 100 mg/day (n = 7), the dose was reduced from 400 mg/day to 100 mg/day during follow-up in 9 patients. After a median treatment of 71 months (range 1-135), the 5-year survival rate was 83%; 4/22 (18%) patients died (chronic phase; n = 2; blast phase, n = 2) due to progression (n = 3) or comorbidity while in remission (n = 1). Of note, 3/4 patients had a complex karyotype. In summary, the most important characteristics of myeloid/lymphoid neoplasms with rearrangement of PDGFRB include (a) male predominance, (b) frequent lack of hypereosinophilia, (c) presentation in chronic or blast phase, (d) rapid responses and long-term remission on low-dose imatinib, and (e) possible adverse prognostic impact of a complex karyotype.Entities:
Keywords: Clonal eosinophilia; Fusion gene; Imatinib; MPN; PDGFRB rearrangement
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28725989 DOI: 10.1007/s00277-017-3067-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Hematol ISSN: 0939-5555 Impact factor: 3.673