2018
DOI: 10.1002/ajh.25247
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A multimodality work‐up of patients with Hypereosinophilia

Abstract: The work-up of patients with hypereosinophilia (HE) is complex. Following the recently revised World Health Organization criteria, we retrospectively reviewed 125 patients who were referred to us to exclude a neoplastic cause of HE (2003-2016). The clinical laboratory work-up confirmed secondary HE in 25 (20%) patients; myeloid/lymphoid neoplasms with rearrangements of PDGFRA (n = 9) or PDGFRB (n = 2) (9%); HE associated with a well-defined myeloid neoplasm in 8 (6%); and abnormal bone marrow and/or molecular … Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…12 Idiopathic HES and hypereosinophilia of unknown significance are diagnoses of exclusion, and account for a substantial proportion (30-50%) of diagnoses of patients evaluated for eosinophilia. 2426 Evaluating these patients for IgG4-RD is an important and underappreciated aspect of their care. In fact, we previously published a case report with a diagnostic label of idiopathic HES, reviewed by several world experts in eosinophilia who concurred with the diagnosis, which was subsequently found to be IgG4-RD.…”
Section: Clinical Presentationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…12 Idiopathic HES and hypereosinophilia of unknown significance are diagnoses of exclusion, and account for a substantial proportion (30-50%) of diagnoses of patients evaluated for eosinophilia. 2426 Evaluating these patients for IgG4-RD is an important and underappreciated aspect of their care. In fact, we previously published a case report with a diagnostic label of idiopathic HES, reviewed by several world experts in eosinophilia who concurred with the diagnosis, which was subsequently found to be IgG4-RD.…”
Section: Clinical Presentationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reactive proliferations of eosinophils are secondary to infection, drugs, allergy, inflammatory conditions, solid tumors or lymphoproliferative neoplasms. Clonal eosinophilic proliferations are caused by various hematopoietic stem neoplasms, such as eosinophilia associated with PDGFRA, PDGFRB , FGFR1 , and PCM1‐JAK2 rearrangement, or chronic eosinophilic leukemia, not other specified (CEL‐NOS) (Hu et al, 2018; Wang, 2019). The workup of patients with eosinophilia is highly complex, which often requires a multidisciplinary approach including clinical correlation, morphological assessment in combination with immunophenotyping, cytogenetic analysis, and molecular studies.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(Wang, 2019; Wang et al, 2017). After an exhausting workup, a clear cause of HES remains unknown in a significant proportion of patients (Hu et al, 2018), and such cases would be considered to be idiopathic.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a study of 556 patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms, the incidence of PDGFRB rearrangement was 1.8% [13]. Also, in a single center study, the incidence of PDGFRB rearrangement in hyper eosinophilia patients was 9% (2/25) [14]. As been reported, the response rate of MPN with eosinophilia and PDGFRB rearrangement was more than 95% [3].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 67%