| Literature DB >> 35194022 |
Youssef Salama1, Fang Zhao2, Jennifer L Oliveira3, Ji Yuan3, Dragan Jevremovic3, Ronald S Go4, Wei Ding4, Sameer A Parikh4, Mithun V Shah4, Paul J Hampel4, Aref Al-Kali4, William G Morice3, Min Shi5.
Abstract
Patients with large granular lymphocytic leukemia (LGLL) frequently present with neutropenia. When present, anemia is usually accompanied by neutropenia and/or thrombocytopenia and isolated anemia is uncommon. We evaluated a cohort of 244 LGLL patients spanning 15 years and herein report the clinicopathologic features of 34 (14%) with isolated anemia. The patients with isolated anemia showed a significantly male predominance (p = 0.001), a lower level of hemoglobulin (p < 0.0001) and higher MCV (p = 0.017) and were less likely to have rheumatoid arthritis (p = 0.023) compared to the remaining 210 patients. Of the 34 LGLL patients with isolated anemia, 13 (38%) presented with pure red cell aplasia (PRCA), markedly decreased reticulocyte count and erythroid precursors, and more transfusion-dependence when compared to non-PRCA patients. There was no other significant clinicopathologic difference between PRCA and non-PRCA patients. 32 patients were followed for a median duration of 51 months (6-199). 24 patients were treated (11/11 PRCA and 13/21 non-PRCA patients, p < 0.02). The overall response rate to first-line therapy was 83% [8/11 (72.7%) for PRCA, 12/13 (92.3%) for non-PRCA], including 14 showing complete response and 6 showing partial response with a median response duration of 48 months (12-129). Half of non-PRCA patients who were observed experienced progressive anemia. During follow-up, no patients developed neutropenia; however, 5/27 (18.5%) patients developed thrombocytopenia. No significant difference in overall survival was noted between PRCA and non-PRCA patients. In summary, this study demonstrates the unique features of LGLL with isolated anemia and underscores the importance of recognizing LGLL as a potential cause of isolated anemia, which may benefit from disease-specific treatment. LGLL patients with PRCA were more likely to require treatment but demonstrated similar clinicopathologic features, therapeutic responses, and overall survival compared to isolated anemia without PRCA, suggesting PRCA and non-PRCA of T-LGLL belong to a common disease spectrum.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35194022 PMCID: PMC8863822 DOI: 10.1038/s41408-022-00632-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Cancer J ISSN: 2044-5385 Impact factor: 9.812
Clinical features of LGLL patients with and without isolated anemia, and LGLL patients with isolated anemia presenting with and without PRCA.
| Clinical characteristics | Without isolated anemia ( | With isolated anemia ( | Isolated anemia with PRCA ( | Isolated anemia without PRCA ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex, | ||||||
| Male:female | 126:84 | 30:4 | 0.001 | 11:2 | 19:2 | 0.627 |
| Age, median (range), y | 65 (39–91) | 70 (32–90) | 0.124 | 72 (41–90) | 70 (32–87) | 0.810 |
| Medical history, | ||||||
| Rheumatoid arthritis | 38 (19%) | 1 (3%) | 0.023 | 1 (8%) | 0 (0%) | 0.400 |
| Hematologic malignancies | 32 (16%) | 10 (29%) | 0.054 | 4 (31%) | 6 (29%) | 0.290 |
| Non-hematologic malignancies | 23 (11%) | 6 (18%) | 0.299 | 2 (15%) | 4 (19%) | 0.340 |
| BM/PBSCT transplantation prior to LGLL diagnosis | 4 (2%) | 2 (6%) | 0.207 | 1 (8%) | 1 (5%) | 0.480 |
| Solid organ transplantation prior to LGLL diagnosis | 6 (3%) | 3 (9%) | 0.123 | 2 (15%) | 1(5%) | 0.270 |
| B symptoms, | 17 (8%) | 1 (3%) | 0.483 | 7 (54%) | 9 (43%) | 0.220 |
| Splenomegaly, | 42 (21%) | 6 (18%) | 0.749 | 2 (15%) | 2 (10%) | 0.350 |
| Lymphadenopathy, | 3 (1%) | 1 (3%) | 0.464 | 0 (0%) | 1 (5%) | 0.620 |
| Red cell transfusion dependent, | 35 (17%) | 18 (53%) | <0.0001 | 13 (100%) | 5 (24%) | <0.0001 |
| Hemoglobin (g/dL), median (range) | 11.4 (3.5–14.8) | 9.1 (5.0–12.7) | <0.0001 | 8.5 (5.0–9.7) | 9.3 (5.2–12.7) | 0.120 |
| MCV (fl), median (range) | 94.5 (72–127) | 99.9 (83.5–128.8) | 0.017 | 94.6 (83.5–111) | 100.9 (84.1–128.8) | 0.035 |
| Reticulocytes (%), median (range) | 1.78 (0.13–8.77) | 0.93 (0.07–6.09) | 0.009 | 0.48 (0.07–0.65) | 1.23 (0.61–6.09) | 0.002 |
| Reticulocytes (×109/L), median (range) | 53.8 (2.5–186,620) | 19.3 (1.9–211.3) | 0.036 | 10.5 (1.9–19) | 30.5 (16.9–211.3) | 0.010 |
| Erythropoietin (mIU/mL), median (range) | 90 (8.5–68,200) | 420 (14–2883) | 0.466 | 853 (260–2608) | 151.9 (14–2883) | 0.210 |
| Absolute Neutrophil count (×109/L), median (range) | 0.9 (0.0–3.8) | 2.5 (1.6–11) | 0.013 | 2.6 (1.6–11) | 2.4 (1.6–5.4) | 0.745 |
| Absolute lymphocyte count (×109/L), median (range) | 3.0 (0.7–14.3) | 4.0 (0.6–9.0) | 0.078 | 2.6 (0.6–9.0) | 4.4 (1.5–9.0) | 0.316 |
| Absolute LGLL count (×109/L), median (range) | 2.0 (0.5–30) | 2.1 (0.5–9.8) | 0.668 | 1.8 (0.5–6.6) | 2.6 (0.5–9.8) | 0.127 |
| Platelet (×109/L), median (range) | 183 (20–680) | 283 (113–755) | <0.0001 | 246 (113–610) | 293 (157–755) | 0.609 |
Pathologic features of LGLL patients with isolated anemia presenting with and without PRCAa.
| Pathologic characteristic | With PRCA ( | Without PRCA ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flow cytometric findings | |||
| T-LGLL, αβ | 10 | 15 | 0.319 |
| T-LGLL, γδ | 2 | 3 | 0.374 |
| CLPD-NK | 1 | 2 | 0.452 |
| Bone marrow biopsy | |||
| Median cellularity, %, median | 27.5% | 45% | 0.0007 |
| Erythroid quantity, median | −3b | 0b | <0.00001 |
| Myeloid quantity, median | 0b | 0b | 0.769 |
| Megakaryocytic quantity, median | 0b | 0b | 0.196 |
| LGLL involvement, %, median | 15% | 20% | 0.365 |
| Intrasinusoidal cytotoxic cells | 10 (77%) | 14 (67%) | 0.287 |
| TIA-1 | 9 (69%) | 13 (70%) | 0.286 |
| Granzyme B | 9 (69%) | 13 (65%) | 0.286 |
| Clonality | |||
| Clonal T cells in T-LGLL | 12 (100%) | 18 (100%) | 1 |
| Clonal NK cells in CLPD-NK | 1 (100%) | 2 (100%) | 1 |
| 0/3 (0%) | 3/5 (60%) | 0.196 | |
aOne patient did not have bone marrow biopsy, hence is not included here.
b0 normal, −3 markedly decreased.
Clinical outcomes of LGLL patients with isolated anemia presenting with and without PRCA.
| Clinical outcomes | With PRCA ( | Without PRCA ( | P |
|---|---|---|---|
| 75 (6–155) | 45 (4–189) | 0.366 | |
| 0 (0%) | 8 (38%) | 0.029 | |
| 11 (100%) | 13 (62%) | 0.029 | |
|
| |||
| Cyclophosphamide | 4 (36%) | 7 (54%) | 0.228 |
| Methotrexate | 3 (27%) | 6 (46%) | 0.283 |
| Cyclosporin | 4 (36%) | 0 (0%) | 0.009 |
|
| |||
| Complete remission | 7 (64%) | 7 (54%) | 0.697 |
| Partial remission | 1 (9%) | 5 (38%) | 0.166 |
| No response | 3 (27%) | 1 (8%) | 0.587 |
Fig. 1Response to first-line therapy in LGLL patients with isolated anemia presenting with and without PRCA.
X-axis represents the number of patients. Green, orange, and gray bars represent complete remission, partial remission, and no response, respectively.
Fig. 2Overall survival of LGLL patients with isolated anemia presenting with and without PRCA.
Red line and black line represent patients with PRCA and patients without PRCA, respectively.