| Literature DB >> 33791220 |
Daniele Cattaneo1, Giorgio Alberto Croci2,3, Cristina Bucelli1, Silvia Tabano2,4, Marta Giulia Cannone4,5, Gabriella Gaudioso3, Maria Chiara Barbanti1,6, Kordelia Barbullushi1,6, Paola Bianchi1, Elisa Fermo1, Sonia Fabris1, Luca Baldini1,6, Umberto Gianelli2,3, Alessandra Iurlo1.
Abstract
Lack of demonstrable mutations affecting JAK2, CALR, or MPL driver genes within the spectrum of BCR-ABL1-negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) is currently referred to as a triple-negative genotype, which is found in about 10% of patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET) and 5-10% of those with primary myelofibrosis (PMF). Very few papers are presently available on triple-negative ET, which is basically described as an indolent disease, differently from triple-negative PMF, which is an aggressive myeloid neoplasm, with a significantly higher risk of leukemic evolution. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the bone marrow morphology and the clinical-laboratory parameters of triple-negative ET patients, as well as to determine their molecular profile using next-generation sequencing (NGS) to identify any potential clonal biomarkers. We evaluated a single-center series of 40 triple-negative ET patients, diagnosed according to the 2017 WHO classification criteria and regularly followed up at the Hematology Unit of our Institution, between January 1983 and January 2019. In all patients, NGS was performed using the Illumina Ampliseq Myeloid Panel; morphological and immunohistochemical features of the bone marrow trephine biopsies were also thoroughly reviewed. Nucleotide variants were detected in 35 out of 40 patients. In detail, 29 subjects harbored one or two variants and six cases showed three or more concomitant nucleotide changes. The most frequent sequence variants involved the TET2 gene (55.0%), followed by KIT (27.5%). Histologically, most of the cases displayed a classical ET morphology. Interestingly, prevalent megakaryocytes morphology was more frequently polymorphic with a mixture of giant megakaryocytes with hyperlobulated nuclei, normal and small sized maturing elements, and naked nuclei. Finally, in five cases a mild degree of reticulin fibrosis (MF-1) was evident together with an increase in the micro-vessel density. By means of NGS we were able to identify nucleotide variants in most cases, thus we suggest that a sizeable proportion of triple-negative ET patients do have a clonal disease. In analogy with driver genes-mutated MPNs, these observations may prevent issues arising concerning triple-negative ET treatment, especially when a cytoreductive therapy may be warranted.Entities:
Keywords: bone marrow morphology; essential thrombocytemia; next-generation sequencing; prognosis; triple-negative
Year: 2021 PMID: 33791220 PMCID: PMC8006378 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.637116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Baseline clinical and laboratory features of 40 triple-negative ET patients.
| Male/female | 16/24 |
| Age (years), median (range) | 50.2 (20–85) |
| Hb (g/dl), median (range) | 13.8 (10.8–16.1) |
| Hct (%), median (range) | 41.8 (33.2–49.1) |
| WBC count (×109/L), median (range) | 8.01 (5.23–12.5) |
| PLT count (×109/L), median (range) | 595 (443–2456) |
| LDH (IU/L), median (range) | 220 (105–462) |
| Serum erythropoietin (mIU/mL), median (range) | 7.15 (0.6–14.1) |
| Circulating CD34+ cells (/μl), median (range) | 5 (1–9) |
| Cytogenetic abnormalities, | 7 (17.5) |
| Palpable splenomegaly, | 5 (12.5) |
| Previous thrombosis, | 2 (5.0) |
| Previous hemorrhages, | / |
| Low risk | 25 (62.5) |
| High risk | 15 (37.5) |
| Low risk | 28 (70.0) |
| Intermediate risk | 10 (25.0) |
| High risk | 2 (5.0) |
| Very Low risk | 26 (65.0) |
| Low risk | / |
| Intermediate risk | 12 (30.0) |
| High risk | 2 (5.0) |
| Cytoreductive therapy, | 22 (55.0) |
| Antiplatelet therapy, | 37 (92.5) |
| Follow-up (years), median (range) | 7.0 (1.2–36.8) |
| Deceased, | 4 (10.0) |
ET, essential thrombocythemia; Hb, hemoglobin; Hct, hematocrit; WBC, white blood cells; PLT, platelets; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase.
Figure 1Variants distribution (A), relative frequencies of pathogenic variants (B) and mutational spectrum (C) along the series (n = 40).
Histologic features of 40 triple-negative ET patients.
| Age related increase | 5/40 (12.5%) | 10–19% |
| Increased in quantity | 3/40 (7.5%) | <10% |
| Left shifted | 5/40 (12.5%) | <10% |
| Increased in quantity | 10/40 (25%) | <10% |
| Left shifted | 16/40 (40%) | <10% |
| <3:1 | 13/40 (32.5%) | NA |
| =3:1 | 26/40 (65%) | |
| >3:1 | 1/40 (2.5%) | |
| Increased in quantity | 40/40 (100%) | >80% |
| Small cluster (>3 cells) | 40/40 (100%) | 10–19% |
| Large cluster (>7 cells) | 0/40 (0%) | 0% |
| Loose cluster | 40/40 (100%) | 20–49% |
| Dense cluster | 11/40 (27.5%) | <5% |
| Normal/small | 37/40 (92.5%) | <5% |
| Giant | 40/40 (100%) | 20–49% |
| Hyperlobulated nuclei | 40/40 (100%) | 50–80% |
| Cloud-like/bulbous nuclei | 2/40 (5%) | <10% |
| Naked nuclei | 17/40 (42.5%) | 20–49% |
| Maturation defects | 4/40 (10%) | 0% |
| Giant, hyperlobulated | 17/40 (42.5%) | NA |
| Polymorphic | 23/40 (57.5%) | NA |
| MF 0 | 34/40 (85%) | <5% |
| MF 1 | 5/40 (12.5%) | 0% |
| MF 2-3 | 0/40 (0%) | 0% |
| Osteosclerosis | 0/40 (0%) | |
| Increased density | 5/40 (12.5%) | NA |
| Ectasic vessels | 16/40 (40%) | NA |
| Endoluminal hemopoiesis | 1/40 (2.5%) | NA |
| Present | 8/40 (20%) | <5% |
ET, essential thrombocythemia; NA, not assessed.
Figure 2Typical ET case from a 40-year-old patient (a H/E, 20x), featuring a polymorphic spectrum of megakaryocytes, but with giant, hyperlobated forms and scant naked nuclei, MF-0 fibrosis (b Gomori, 20x) and unremarkable CD34+ blasts and vessels (c CD34, 20x). BM biopsy from a 35-year-old subject (d H/E, 20x) featuring mild hypercellularity, increased, left-shifted erythropoiesis with proerythroblasts and absolute predominance of giant, hyperlobated megakaryocytes; there is only a minor increase in reticulin fibers (e Gomori, 20x) and vessel density (f CD34, 20x). A further case from a 31-year-old patient shows mild panmyelosis (g H/E, 20x) with polymorphic megakaryocyte clusters, but featuring ET-like giant forms, along with dim reticulin fibers increase (h Gomori, 20x) and mild micro-vessel proliferation (i CD34, 20x). The last panel from a 52-year-old individual depicts a normocellular bone marrow (j H/E, 20x) with clustering of predominantly hyperlobulated megakaryocytes, with scant bulbous forms (inset) or with maturation defects, with unremarkable fibrosis and CD34+ positive cells (k Gomori, 20x; l CD34, 20x).