| Literature DB >> 28891083 |
Takashi Kobayashi1, Yasuhito Nannya1, Motoshi Ichikawa1, Kenji Oritani2, Yuzuru Kanakura2, Akihiro Tomita3,4, Hitoshi Kiyoi3, Masayoshi Kobune5, Junji Kato5, Hiroshi Kawabata6, Motohiro Shindo7, Yoshihiro Torimoto8, Yuji Yonemura9, Nobuyoshi Hanaoka10, Hideki Nakakuma10, Daisuke Hasegawa11, Atsushi Manabe11, Naohito Fujishima12, Nobuharu Fujii13, Mitsune Tanimoto13, Yasuyoshi Morita14, Akira Matsuda15, Atsushi Fujieda16, Naoyuki Katayama16, Haruhiko Ohashi17, Hirokazu Nagai18, Yoshiki Terada19, Masayuki Hino19, Ken Sato20, Naoshi Obara21, Shigeru Chiba21, Kensuke Usuki22, Masatsugu Ohta23, Osamu Imataki24, Makiko Uemura24, Tomoiku Takaku25, Norio Komatsu25, Akira Kitanaka26, Kazuya Shimoda26, Kenichiro Watanabe27, Kaoru Tohyama28, Akifumi Takaori-Kondo6, Hideo Harigae29, Shunya Arai1, Yasushi Miyazaki30, Keiya Ozawa31,32, Mineo Kurokawa1.
Abstract
Hypoplastic myelodysplastic syndrome (hMDS) is a distinct entity with bone marrow (BM) hypocellularity and the risk of death from BM failure (BMF). To elucidate the characteristics of hMDS, the data of 129 patients diagnosed between April 2003 and March 2012 were collected from 20 institutions and the central review team of the National Research Group on Idiopathic Bone Marrow Failure Syndromes, and compared with 115 non-hMDS patients. More RA and fewer CMMoL and RAEB-t in French-American-British (FAB) and more RCUD and MDS-U and fewer RCMD in World Health Organization (WHO) classifications were found in hMDS than non-hMDS with significant differences. The overall survival (OS) and AML progression-free survival (AML-PFS) of hMDS were higher than those of non-hMDS, especially in patients at age ≥50 and of lower risk in Revised International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS-R). In competing risks analysis, hMDS exhibited decreased risk of AML-progression in lower IPSS or IPSS-R risk patients, and higher risk of death from BMF in patients at age ≥50. Poor performance status (PS ≥2) and high karyotype risks in IPSS-R (high and very high) were significant risk factors of death and AML-progression in Cox proportional hazards analysis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28891083 DOI: 10.1002/ajh.24905
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hematol ISSN: 0361-8609 Impact factor: 10.047