| Literature DB >> 34380367 |
Hussein A Abbas1,2, Patrick K Reville1,2, Alexis Geppner2, Caitlin R Rausch3, Naveen Pemmaraju2, Maro Ohanian2, Koji Sasaki2, Gautam Borthakur2, Naval Daver2, Courtney DiNardo2, Carlos Bueso-Ramos4, Sherry Pierce2, Elias Jabbour2, Guillermo Garcia-Manero2, Marina Konopleva2, Farhad Ravandi2, Hagop Kantarjian2, Tapan M Kadia2.
Abstract
Myeloid sarcoma (MS) in the setting of concomitant medullary AML is relatively well described, while much less is known about patients presenting with MS with <20% bone marrow blasts. We conducted a retrospective analysis of 56 patients with MS with <20% marrow blasts seen at MD Anderson between 2005 and 2020. The prevalence of MS without medullary AML was 1.4% among all newly diagnosed AML patients. The majority (75%) of patients had a single known anatomic site involved, with the skin (34%) being the most frequent. The most common histologic subtype was monocytic, and 11% of patients had a known history of an antecedent hematologic disorder. The majority of patients (70%) received frontline intensive chemotherapy induction, with 75% of those evaluable attaining complete or partial responses. The median overall survival (OS) and event-free survival (EFS) were 3.41 and 3.07 years, respectively. Patients with bone marrow blasts of ≥5% or medullary relapse had inferior outcomes, while age (>60 years) was not associated with outcomes. There was a suggestion that patients with isolated leukemia cutis may have had better outcomes compared to patients with other organ involvement, but this did not reach statistical significance. Most patients who had cytogenetic analysis had a diploid karyotype within their MS and bone marrow. RAS pathway mutations were enriched in MS at diagnosis, and at time of medullary relapse. Our study provides a large dataset summarizing the clinical and molecular analysis of patients with MS with <20% BM blasts and suggests that monitoring for medullary leukemia is important for early detection of relapse.Entities:
Keywords: Myeloid sarcoma; acute myeloid leukemia; cytogenetics; extramedullary; medullary; molecular
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34380367 PMCID: PMC8939853 DOI: 10.1080/10428194.2021.1961235
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leuk Lymphoma ISSN: 1026-8022