Summary. Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are a group of clonal disturbances with defective cellular differentiation. Vitamin D3 (VD) analogues can act on the differentiation and maturity of different cell lines. We studied the effects of VD on a series of patients with MDS in an open-design trial. Nineteen patients, 12 men and seven women, with MDS were included. Patients were 74·8 Ϯ 5·6 years (mean Ϯ SD), seven had refractory anaemia with ringed sideroblasts, five had refractory anaemia, one had refractory anaemia with excess of blasts and six had chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia. All the patients were in a low to intermediate risk group. Mean follow-up period was 26·21 months, range 9-75. Responders were defined as follows: granulocyte or platelet count increase by 50%, or haemoglobin increase of 1·5 g/dl or transfusion needs decrease by 50%. The first five patients received 266 mg of calcifediol three times a week and the other 14 received calcitriol (0·25-0·75 mg/d). Response was observed in 11 patients. In the calcifedioltreated group, one case responded, three were nonresponders, and one showed progression. In the calcitriol group, 10 were responders (two with major response), and four were non-responders. No correlation was observed between baseline levels of vitamin D metabolites and the presence of response. No hypercalcaemia was observed. Treatment with vitamin D3 metabolites could induce a longstanding response of the haematological disturbance in some low-intermediate risk MDS patients without inducing hypercalcaemia.
Myeloid or type 1 dendritic cell leukaemia is an exceedingly rare haematopoietic neoplasm characterized by a specific immunophenotypic profile close to plasmacytoid dendritic cell and acute myelogenous leukaemia. A 77-year-old man presenting specific cutaneous infiltration by myeloid dendritic cell leukaemia is reported. The clinical features as well as the cutaneous histopathological and immunohistochemical features led to the initial diagnosis of CD4+/CD56+ haematodermic neoplasm. However, extensive immunophenotypic studies performed from peripheral blood blasts disclosed that leukaemic cells expressed myeloid dendritic cell markers, confirming the diagnosis. The diagnostic difficulties of specific cutaneous involvement by myeloid dendritic cell leukaemia on the basis of routine histopathological and immunohistochemical features are highlighted.
We attempted to differentiate monoclonal gammopathies of unknown significance (MGUS) and multiple myeloma (MM) on morphologic grounds and to determine interobserver reproducibility of the differentiation. Cytologists blindly evaluated bone marrow smears from 154 patients with bone marrow plasmacytosis for the proportion of plasma cells with predefined cellular atypias. The single morphologic characteristic that most strongly differentiated MM from MGUS was the presence of nucleoli. The percentage of plasma cells, cytoplasmic contour irregularities, and anisocytosis also predicted a diagnosis of myeloma in multivariate analysis. Six cytologists independently evaluated 68 consecutive cases to determine sensitivity and specificity of these cytomorphologic features. The interobserver coefficient of variation for the plasma cell count was 33%. On consideration of the diagnosis, 36 of 41 MGUS cases and all 24 cases of myeloma were classified correctly. The use of a predesigned score system did not present such a bias, although it did not improve overall efficiency. The plasma cell count is the most predictive characteristic of myeloma from a cytologic viewpoint, but the interobserver variability is high. Interobserver variability is also high in the assessment of morphologic atypia, and atypical traits are not uncommon in plasma cells in MGUS.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.