Seventeen children (11 M, 6 F) with acute leukaemia and myeloproliferative disorders were investigated for growth and endocrine dysfunction. All had undergone bone marrow transplantation prepared with cyclophosphamide and single fraction total body irradiation (900-1000 cGy) between 1.5 and 3.8 (mean 2.2) years previously. The majority of children exhibited growth failure, which was of multiple aetiology. Ten patients, of whom eight had had previous prophylactic cranial irradiation, had evidence of growth hormone deficiency based on the reduced growth hormone response to insulin induced hypoglycaemia. Three patients had evidence of hypothalamic damage as shown by their growth hormone response to 200 micrograms GHRH (1-29) NH2 intravenously. Gonadal failure was common, assessed clinically, and biochemically by basal gonadotrophin and sex steroid concentrations. All four girls of adolescent age (10.6-14.1 years) had ovarian failure requiring sex steroid replacement. Of the eight boys of adolescent age (12.3-18.3 years), two had testicular failure requiring sex steroid supplements. Both of these had had previous testicular irradiation. Five others had compensated gonadal failure, and one had normal Leydig cell function. Abnormalities of the TSH response to TRH occurred in 10 patients but only three had overt hypothyroidism. Unlike growth hormone deficiency, gonadal and thyroid dysfunction showed no correlation with previous cranial radiotherapy.
Summary. Donor-derived leukaemia is exceptional after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (BMT). A woman with chronic myeloid leukaemia received an allogeneic BMT from a human leucocyte antigen-identical brother. The donor, a 50-year-old non-smoker, died of squamous cell bronchogenic carcinoma 1 year later. At 4 years post BMT, the patient became BCR/ABL positive and relapsed with acute myeloid leukaemia, which was shown to be donor-derived cytogenetically and molecularly. Retrospective analysis showed that the donor-leukaemic clone had started to evolve as early as 6 months post BMT. Sequencing of p53 ruled out Li-Fraumeni syndrome. Predisposition to malignancy might be an underlying mechanism of donor-cell leukaemia.
A 67-year-old Chinese woman presented with mediastinal B cell lymphoma in 1992 with incidental leukocytosis. Bone marrow and peripheral blood findings confirmed the diagnosis of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). After combination chemotherapy and radiotherapy for lymphoma, her peripheral blood counts remained normal, and she refused further treatment for nearly six years. Frank hematologic relapse occurred in 1998 and low dose hydroxyurea was used, which was stopped after six months owing to cytopenia. She remained well without treatment at 12-year follow up. Retrospective Southern blot analysis confirmed BCR gene rearrangement in marrow in 1992 and 1998, but not in the lymphoma or the latest peripheral blood. Fluorescence in-situ hybridzation analysis showed no Philadelphia chromosome positive (Ph+) cells in the peripheral blood at last (FISH) follow-up, but BCR/ABL remained detectable. The relevance of the concomitant occurrence of CML and lymphoma and the unusually favorable response of CML to chemotherapy to the pathogenesis of CML is discussed.
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