| Literature DB >> 33664463 |
Bruno Fattizzo1,2,3, Robin Ireland1, Alan Dunlop1, Deborah Yallop1, Shireen Kassam1, Joanna Large1, Shreyans Gandhi1, Petra Muus1, Charles Manogaran1, Katy Sanchez1, Dario Consonni2, Wilma Barcellini2, Ghulam J Mufti1,4, Judith C W Marsh1,4, Austin G Kulasekararaj5,6.
Abstract
In this large single-centre study, we report high prevalence (25%) of, small (<10%) and very small (<1%), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) clones by high-sensitive cytometry among 3085 patients tested. Given PNH association with bone marrow failures, we analyzed 869 myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and 531 aplastic anemia (AA) within the cohort. PNH clones were more frequent and larger in AA vs. MDS (p = 0.04). PNH clone, irrespective of size, was a good predictor of response to immunosuppressive therapy (IST) and to stem cell transplant (HSCT) (in MDS: 84% if PNH+ vs. 44.7% if PNH-, p = 0.01 for IST, and 71% if PNH+ vs. 56.6% if PNH- for HSCT; in AA: 78 vs. 50% for IST, p < 0.0001, and 97 vs. 77%, p = 0.01 for HSCT). PNH positivity had a favorable impact on disease progression (0.6% vs. 4.9% IPSS-progression in MDS, p < 0.005; and 2.1 vs. 6.9% progression to MDS in AA, p = 0.01), leukemic evolution (6.8 vs. 12.7%, p = 0.01 in MDS), and overall survival [73% (95% CI 68-77) vs. 51% (48-54), p < 0.0001], with a relative HR for mortality of 2.37 (95% CI 1.8-3.1; p < 0.0001) in PNH negative cases, both in univariate and multivariable analysis. Our data suggest systematic PNH testing in AA/MDS, as it might allow better prediction/prognostication and consequent clinical/laboratory follow-up timing.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33664463 PMCID: PMC8550969 DOI: 10.1038/s41375-021-01190-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leukemia ISSN: 0887-6924 Impact factor: 12.883
Clinical characteristics of the entire cohort at baseline and complications during follow-up.
| PNH neg | PNH pos | |
|---|---|---|
| Number of patients, | 2311 (75) | 774 (25) |
| Male/female ratio | 1.17 | 1.05 |
| median age, years (IQR) | 55 (39–67) | 47 (32–64)* |
| Reason for testing | ||
| MDS, | 693 (32) | 176 (24)* |
| AA, | 204 (9) | 327 (44)* |
| MDS/AA, | 5 (0.2) | 22 (3)* |
| Isolated hemolytic PNH, | 0 (0) | 97 (13) |
| MPN, | 76 (4) | 16 (2) |
| MDS/MPN, | 92 (4) | 9 (1)* |
| Acute leukemia, | 209 (10) | 29 (4)* |
| Isolated cytopenia, | 535 (25) | 51 (7)* |
| Thrombosis without cytopenia, | 284 (13) | 17 (2)* |
| Others, | 62 (3) | 0 (0) |
| Thrombosis occurrence, | 370 (17) | 96 (13) |
| Death, | 725 (34) | 141 (19)* |
| Lost to follow-up, | 146 (7) | 75 (10) |
| Median follow-up, years (range) | 2 (0.5–15) | 3.4 (3–16) |
| Hematologic parameters | ||
| Hb < 100 g/L, | 409 (40) | 351 (47)** |
| PLT < 100 × 109/L, | 463 (45) | 423 (57)* |
| ANC < 1.5 × 109/L, | 478 (46.5) | 342 (46) |
| Pancytopenia, | 160 (16) | 183 (25)* |
| Median LDH U/L (range) | 212 (92–1520) | 245 (70–4614)* |
Values are shown for all patients tested (negative, N = 2311, and positive, N = 774).
MDS myelodysplastic syndromes, AA aplastic anemia, MDS/AA hypoplastic MDS, MPN myeloproliferative neoplasms, Hb hemoglobin, PLT platelets, ANC absolute neutrophil counts.
*p < 0.0005, **p = 0.01.
aPre-treatment hematologic parameters at diagnosis were available only for about half PNH negative patients and were included in the analysis.
Clinical characteristics of patients divided according to PNH clone size on granulocytes at baseline.
| Clone size | Neg | 0.01–1% | 1–10% | 10–50% | >50% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Males, | 945 (54) | 114 (53) | 60 (56) | 30 (51) | 56 (44) |
| Females, | 795 (46) | 101 (47) | 48 (44) | 29 (49) | 72 (56) |
| Median age, years (IQR) | 55 (39–66) | 49 (34–63) | 48 (30–65) | 48 (28–60) | 44 (31–85) |
| MDS, | 616 (35) | 71 (33) | 32 (30) | 13 (22) | 7 (6)* |
| AA, | 175 (10) | 98 (46) | 72 (67) | 40 (68) | 47 (37) |
| MDS/AA, | 92 (5) | 8 (4) | 2 (2) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Acute leukemia, | 157 (9) | 11 (5)* | 0 (0) | 1 (2) | 0 (0) |
| Hemolytic PNH, | 0 (0) | 1 (0.5)a | 1 (0.5)a | 3 (5) | 74 (58)* |
| MPN, | 0 (0) | 8 (4) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| MDS/MPN, | 0 (0) | 4 (2) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Isolated cytopenia, | 433 (25) | 19 (9) | 1 (1) | 1 (2) | 0 (0) |
| Isolated thrombosis, | 245 (14) | 6 (3)* | 1 (1) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Others, | 22 (2) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Treated, | 425 (56) | 130 (68) | 81 (78) | 46 (78) | 114 (89)* |
| Thrombosis, | 315 (18) | 16 (7) | 6 (6) | 3 (5) | 27 (21)* |
| Death, | 536 (31) | 33 (15) | 12 (11) | 12 (20) | 9(7)* |
| Hb < 100 g/L, | 299 (39) | 102 (47) | 58 (54) | 30 (51) | 67 (52) |
| PLT < 10 × 109/L, | 351 (45) | 133 (62) | 88 (82) | 45 (76)* | 43 (34) |
| ANC < 1.5 × 109/L, | 220 (29) | 65 (30) | 57 (53) | 29 (49) | 17 (13) |
| Median LDH U/L (range) | 197 (73–1520) | 222 (83–1200) | 198 (108–1158) | 266 (70–984) | 880 (97–4403)* |
Values are shown only for patients with evaluable granulocyte PNH clone size at baseline by FLAER and with available clinical and laboratory data (Negative, N = 1740, positive, N = 510).
MDS myelodysplastic syndromes, AA aplastic anemia, MDS/AA hypoplastic MDS, MPN myeloproliferative neoplasms, Hb hemoglobin, PLT platelets, ANC absolute neutrophil counts.
*p < 0.0005.
aTwo patients showed small and very small clones at baseline and then developed classic hemolytic PNH, with 15% and 20% clone size, respectively.
Fig. 1PNH clone size distribution according to the different diagnosis.
MDS cases mostly presented with small (<10%) and very small clones (<1%), while classical PNH with large clones (>50%), and AA cases mainly medium clones (10–50%). LDH significantly increase along with clone size (p < 0.00001).
Fig. 2Hematologic parameters and response rates in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and aplastic anemia (AA) cases according to PNH positivity.
A Median blood counts and LDH levels +SD in PNH+ (gray bars) and PNH− (white bars) MDS cases; p = 0.04 for Hb; p < 0.0001 for PLT and LDH. B Median blood counts and LDH levels ± SD in PNH+ (gray bars) and PNH− (white bars) AA cases; p < 0.0001 for PLT and LDH. Blood counts were collected at the time of PNH clone testing, hence the positive impact of transfusions on baseline hemoglobin and platelets cannot be excluded in transfusion-dependent patients. C Forest plot of relative risk for response to treatments in PNH+ and PNH− MDS cases. D Forest plot of relative risk for response to treatments in PNH+ and PNH− AA cases. Good outcome after HSCT was considered as 6 month persistent disease remission. Hb hemoglobin, ANC absolute neutrophil counts, PLT platelets, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, HSCT hematopoietic stem cell transplant, IST immunsuppressive therapy, AZA azacytidine, ORR overall response rate.
Fig. 3Overall survival (OS) at 8 years in PNH positive and PNH negative patients.
A OS according to PNH positivity. B OS according to clone size 0.01–1, 1–10, 10–50, and >50%. C 8 years OS in PNH+ and PNH− MDS cases [mean OS 11.9 + 0.7 years (10.5–13.3) in PNH+ vs. 7.3 + 0.3 (6.6–7.9) in PNH−, p < 0.0001]. D 8 years OS in PNH+ and PNH− AA cases [mean OS 15.8 + 0.43 years (14.9–16.7) in PNH+ vs. 6.5 + 0.35 (5.8–7.21) in PNH−, p < 0.0001].