In a series of 218 subjects diagnosed as having nonleukemic chronic myeloproliferative disorders in a single institution within a 18-year period, 13 instances of acute transformation were registered. They corresponded to 8 out of 70 patients with idiopathic myelofibrosis (IM), 4 out of 91 with polycythemia vera (PV), and 1 out of 57 with essential thrombocythemia (ET). The actuarial probability of developing such a complication at 100 months from diagnosis reached 20.6% in IM, 8.7% in PV, and 4% in ET. Only 1 IM patient whose condition developed into acute leukemia had received prior cytolytic therapy, whereas, in contrast, all PV and ET patients showing this pattern had previously been treated with either 32P or alkylating agents. On the other hand, acute transformation in IM generally had an insidious presentation, contrasting with its abrupt onset in most PV and ET patients. Most acute leukemias (12 out of 13) exhibited a myeloid phenotype. The patients’ median survival from diagnosis of the acute transformation was only 3 months, the development of this complication significantly shortening the patients’ overall survival.
The actuarial probability of malignant transformation and the impact on expected survival were analysed in a series of 128 persons diagnosed with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) over a 20-year period. At a median follow-up of 56 months the M-component remains stable in 101 patients (78.9%), 14 patients (10.9%) have died from non-related disorders and 13 (10.2%) have developed malignant transformation of MGUS (multiple myeloma, 10; primary amyloidosis, two; Waldenström's macroglobulinaemia, one). The actuarial probability of malignant transformation at 5 and 10 years was 8.5% and 19.2%, respectively. When different presenting features were analysed for predictive value of the malignant transformation, the IgA type of MGUS was the only variable associated with a higher probability of such an event (P less than 0.025). Although no significant difference was observed between the survival probability of persons with MGUS and that of the control population, the development of malignant transformation was associated with a shorter survival (P less than 0.001).
The association of essential thrombocythemia (ET) and multiple myeloma (MM) is exceedingly rare, with only four such cases reported in the literature until now. In this paper, a patient is reported who developed IgA-lambda MM more than five years after the diagnosis of ET, for which she had received alpha interferon and radioactive phosphor (32P). She died shortly afterwards despite melphalan and prednisone therapy. In four of the five patients in whom the above association has been reported, including the present one, MM appeared some time after ET was initially recognized, with three of them having received alkylating drugs as their treatment for ET. MM was heterogeneous with respect to the M--component type and the clinical course. The possible etiological & pathogenetic link between both these entities is discussed.
A B-type large-cell primary splenic lymphoma with massive red-pulp involvement was diagnosed in a 64-year-old woman presenting with malaise, fever, anemia, atypical lymphoid cells in peripheral blood, and splenomegaly. This case differs from most splenic lymphomas both macroscopically and microscopically. At macroscopic examination, the spleen was homogeneously red without tumoral nodules or masses. Microscopically, the cords of the red pulp were extensively invaded by tumor cells maintaining patent sinuses. The white pulp was reduced by expansion of the red pulp. To our knowledge only few additional cases of splenic lymphoma with similar features have been previously described. The differential diagnosis of this unusual form of lymphoma with other lymphoproliferative disorders is briefly discussed.
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