| Literature DB >> 30323983 |
Kamal Chamoun1, Sanam Loghavi2, Naveen Pemmaraju1, Marina Konopleva1, Michael Kroll3, Madeleine Nguyen-Cao1, Marisa Hornbaker1, Courtney D DiNardo1, Tapan Kadia1, Jeffrey Jorgensen2, Michael Andreeff1, Shimin Hu2, Christopher B Benton1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm (BPDCN) is a rare and aggressive hematologic malignancy characterized by neoplastic cells that are positive for CD123, CD4, BDCA2, and TCL1 and aberrant expression of CD56. Historically, patients with BPDCN have an unfavorable prognosis and the optimal treatment is not established due to lack of prospective data. CASE REPORT: In this report we describe a patient with Felty's syndrome and myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) in whom a population of aberrant plasmacytoid dendritic cells emerged while on treatment with decitabine. Approximately 4 months later he transformed to leukemic BPDCN with skin and eye manifestations. Cytogenetic analysis showed diploid karyotype and molecular analysis showed mutations in KRAS, NOTCH1, and RUNX1 genes. He was treated with CD123-targeted therapy and had significant response in his marrow, skin, eyes, and functional status after one cycle.Entities:
Keywords: BPDCN; Early detection; MDS; Myelodysplastic syndromes; Prognosis
Year: 2018 PMID: 30323983 PMCID: PMC6174068 DOI: 10.1186/s40164-018-0117-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Hematol Oncol ISSN: 2162-3619
Fig. 1Bone marrow at presentation (MDS) and skin lesions after transformation (BPDCN). Photomicrographs of bone marrow core biopsy specimens at presentation show a erythroid-predominant trilineage hematopoiesis and dysplastic megakaryopoiesis with an increased number of small monolobated megakaryocytes (H&E ×400), and b megakaryocytes with widely separated nuclear lobes (Giemsa, ×1000). c Photographs show violaceous plaques on the abdomen at BPDCN diagnosis, including a truncal skin lesion on the central abdomen demarcated with blue ink, enlarged for inset. Photomicrographs of skin biopsy of the abdominal lesion showing d extensive dermal infiltrate of immature-appearing mononuclear cells (H&E ×40), and e infiltrate that is uniformly and strongly positive for CD123 (immunohistochemistry with hematoxylin counterstain, ×20). f Photograph of same abdominal area showing resolving lesions after 1 month of CD123-targeted therapy with SL-401
Fig. 2Emergence of aberrant CD123+ CD56+ CD4+ and HLA-DR + cells during the treatment period for MDS. Flow cytometry dot plots are shown for 3 longitudinal bone marrow aspirate samples: at presentation (top panel), after six courses of oral decitabine (middle panel), and at the time of fully developed BPDCN (bottom panel). The y-axis for each plot shows CD123 expression, and the x-axis shows HLA-DR, CD4 and CD56 from left to right, respectively. At presentation, the majority of PDCs had an unremarkable immunophenotype (CD123bright/HLA-DR+/CD4+/CD56−). In the interim marrow, there is the emergence of a minor, but more prominent population of aberrant PDCs that are CD56+ (0.79%). At diagnosis, a large population of CD123+ CD4+ CD56+ cells has become clearly evident