Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) is characterized by the presence of the t(15;17) and PML-RARa rearrangement, with good response to treatment with retinoids. However, few cases of variant APL involving alternative chromosomal aberrations have been reported, including t(11;17)(q23;q21) (Wells et al. in Nat Genet 17:109-113, 1; Arnould et al. in Hum Mol Genet 8:1741-1749, 2) t(5;17)(q35;q12-21), t(11;17)(q13;q21) (Grimwade et al in Blood 96:1297-1308, 3) and der(17) (Rego et al. in Blood (ASH Annual Meeting Abstracts)114:Abstract 6, 4), whereby RARa is fused to the PLZF, NPM, NuMA, and STAT5b genes, respectively, have been described. These cases are characterized by distinct morphology, clinical presentation, and in respect to PLZF, a lack of differentiation response to retinoids leading to the need of different approaches concerning diagnostic methods and therapeutics. This paper describes two cases of APL associated with the PLZF-RARA fusion gene enrolled in the IC-APL trial that is a non-randomized, multicenter study conducted in Brazil, Mexico, Chile and Uruguay with the aim to improve the treatment outcome of APL patients in developing countries. These cases, although rare, offer a challenge to its early recognition and proper conduction.
Transformation of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) into acute myelogenous leukemia occurs in approximately 30 % of cases, while progression into acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is rare. We report on a 67-year-old man with the diagnosis of MDS, subtype refractory anemia with ring sideroblasts (RARS), karyotype 20q- , JAK-2 negative and grade III fibrosis on the bone marrow biopsy, who evolved into ALL 33 months after the diagnosis of MDS. RARS is one of the subtypes of MDS with most indolent course. Deletion of the long arm of chromosome 20 (20q-) is considered as good prognosis by the International Prognostic Scoring System, an important scoring system for predicting survival and evolution of MDS. Primary MDS with bone marrow fibrosis may represent a distinct clinicopathological and is supposed to have an unfavorable prognosis. The combined analysis of these features makes this rare report still more challenging and illustrates that biology of MDS is yet to be discovered.
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