CALR mutations are present in 70-84% of JAK2 wild-type myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN) and 67% and 88% of essential thrombocytopenia (ET) and primary myelofibrosis (PMF) respectively. Most cases of MPN are apparently sporadic, but 7-11% have evidence of familial predisposition. While germline mutations in ET-associated genes, MPL and JAK2, have been described in hereditary thrombocytosis, germline mutations in CALR have not been described in any setting. Two types of CALR mutations are common in MPN: a 52-base pair deletion (bp) and a 5 bp insertion, both in exon 9. With rare exceptions, CALR mutations are generally mutually exclusive with JAK2 or MPL mutations and have very rarely been reported in conjunction with the BCR-ABL1translocation.

Here, we report a patient with a germline CALR mutation, thrombocytosis, and subsequent development of BCR-ABL+ CML. A 67-year-old female with no significant medical history presented with severe abdominal pain and nausea. Peripheral blood analysis revealed a marked leukocytosis composed of 66% neutrophils, 16% myelocytes, 6.5% monocytes, 3.5% basophils, 2.5% promyelocytes, 2.5% metamyelocytes, 1.5% lymphocytes, 1.5% blasts, and no eosinophils. The patient was non-anemic and had a normal platelet count (340,000/mm3). Bone marrow biopsy revealed a hypercellular marrow with myeloid predominant trilineage hematopoiesis and 1-2% blasts with morphology consistent with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). Fluorescence in-situ hybridization analysis of peripheral blood identified a BCR-ABL1fusion in 98.5% of interphase cells.

After 3 months of standard imatinib therapy, quantitative RT-PCR showed a reduction of BCR-ABL1/ABL1 in the peripheral blood, however platelet count was elevated at 539,000/mm3. Thrombocytosis persisted over 2 years with a maximal platelet count of 584,000/mm3. Given the patient's thrombocytosis, her peripheral blood was subjected to a next generation sequencing of JAK2, MPL, and CALR genes. A 52-bp out-of-frame deletion in exon 9 of the CALR gene was detected (52% allele frequency) in peripheral blood. In addition, the same 52-bp CALR deletion (63% allele frequency) was present at the time of diagnosis and within a buccal specimen (47% allele frequency) when the BCR-ABL1 transcript was 1% in the peripheral blood. Immunostain of the buccal sample was strongly positive for cytokeratin (CK) AE1/AE3 but CD45 was not detected indicating no leukocyte contamination. This case reports the first instance of a germline CALR mutation associated with thrombocytosis and is the fourth report of the co-occurrence of BCR-ABL1 and CALR mutation in a single patient. Evolution to BCR-ABL1+ CML suppressed the CALR-mutant thrombocytosis phenotype, emphasizing the effect of these genes on lineage determination in abnormal myeloid proliferation.

Disclosures

No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Author notes

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Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

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