Vincenzo Liso1, Arcangelo Liso2 and Gina Zini3.
1 University of Bari, Bari, Italy.
2 Department of Medicine and Surgery, University of Foggia, Foggia, Italy.
3
Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli IRCCS - Istituto di
Ematologia, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Rome, Italy.
Correspondence to: Arcangelo Liso, MD PhD. Department of Medicine and Surgery, University of Foggia, Foggia, Italy. E-mail:
arcangelo.liso@unifg.it
Published: November 1, 2020
Received: September 22, 2020
Accepted: October 9, 2020
Mediterr J Hematol Infect Dis 2020, 12(1): e2020077 DOI
10.4084/MJHID.2020.077
This is an Open Access article distributed
under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License
(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any
medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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To the editor,
To
clarify the area of diagnostic uncertainty of acute leukaemias
involving the erythroid lineage, in 2016, Arber et al. revised the
acute myeloid leukemia not otherwise specified subtype (AML-NOS) in the
book of WHO classification of tumours of haematopoietic and lymphoid
tissues.[1]
Significantly, the authors revised
the blast counting schema and indicated a precise cut-off. In
particular, some cases previously classified as erythroleukemia
(erythroid/myeloid type), in which erythroid precursor cell
constitute ≥
50%
of bone marrow cellularity and myeloid blasts <20% of the total
marrow or peripheral blood cells, were assigned to the group of
myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). Moreover, cases with myeloid blasts
representing ≥
20%
of the cells were defined as acute myeloid leukaemia with
myelodysplastic related changes (AML-MRC) irrespective of the erythroid
cell count. So in those conditions, the number of blasts determined the
assignment to either MDS or AML-MRC category.
In chapter 1 of the
same WHO book (named "Introduction and overview of the classification
of myeloid neoplasms"), in table 1.01 entitled "Diagnostic approach to
myeloid neoplasms in which erythroid precursors constitute ≥
50%
of the nucleated bone marrow cell", the term "pure erythroid leukemia"
(PEL) is assigned to cases displaying >80% immature erythroid
precursors with >30% proerythroblasts, myeloblasts being <20%.
This definition does not exclude, in principle, the presence of a minor
component of myeloblasts.
Notably, the diagnosis of PEL, according
to the same authors (page 161, column 2, line 16), requires the
presence of a "neoplastic proliferation of immature cells
(undifferentiated or proerythroblastic in appearance) committed
exclusively to the erythroid lineage (>80% of the bone marrow cell
are erythroid with >30% proerythroblasts) with no evidence of
significant myeloblastic component".[1]
The term
"non-significant myeloblastic component" was not translated in any
quantitative measure. However, the term "non-significant myeloblastic
component", it is in our opinion rather indefinite, as it is not
related to any inherent characteristic of the blasts, but rather to the
significance one can attribute to them. Some hematologists may
interpret the term "non-significant" as negligible myeloblastic
component, others to the presence of a measurable but non-clonal
proportion of myeloblasts.
The importance of quantifying the
number of bone marrow blasts, however, is underlined as important
prognostic variable in MDS cases, in fact the revised international
prognostic scoring system (IPSS-R) score values for MDS, considers a
very good prognosis patients' samples showing ≤
2% of blasts versus a good prognosis for those showing between 2% and 5% myeloid blasts.[2]
Therefore
is not clear, in the context of the 2016 WHO classification, how a
patient with >80% erythroid precursors (and >30%
proerythroblasts) should be classified in the presence of a bone marrow
proportion of myeloid blasts between 5 and 19%. So, we suggest that the
presence of a minimal number of blasts should always be reported and
evaluated before formulating a definite diagnosis of neoplastic
haematologic diseases.
In conclusion, in our opinion the word
"pure" is misleading in cases of leukemia in which we observe immature
erythroid cells with >30% of proerythroblast (currently named PEL in
the WHO classification), in the presence of a variable proportion of
potentially clonal myeloid blasts. We therefore suggest eliminating the
word “pure” and simply calling these cases as “erythroid leukemia".
Further studies could hopefully evaluate if and how the presence of "a
significant myeloblastic component" has a clinical and prognostic
meaning in such erythroid leukemias.
References
- Arber D.A., Brunning R.A., Orazi A., et al. Acute
Myeloid Leukemia, NOS in Swerdlow S.H., Campo E., Harris N.L., et al in
WHO classification of tumours of haematopoietic and lymphoid tissues :
pag 156-162 International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) Lyon,
2017
- Greenberg P.L., Tuechler H., Schanz
J., et al. Revised international prognostic score system for
myelodysplatic syndromes Blood 2012 ; 120(12),2454-2465 https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2012-03-420489 PMid:22740453 PMCid:PMC4425443
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