A 76-year-old woman with metastatic lung squamous cell carcinoma after chemoradiation presented for follow-up and was found to have leukocytosis, thrombocytosis, and normal hemoglobin with macrocytosis (white blood cell count, 21.2 × 109/L; platelets, 825 × 109/L; hemoglobin, 12.1 g/dL [normal reference, 11.7-15.5 g/dL]; mean corpuscular volume, 108 fL). Prior blood counts showed similar hemoglobin levels 14 months before (13.0 g/dL) and 2 months after marrow biopsy (12.6 g/dL). Bone marrow evaluation revealed 36% ring sideroblasts (prussian blue iron stain in panel A; 100× objective, original magnification ×1000), hypercellular marrow for age (40% to 50%; hematoxylin and eosin stain in panel B; 4× objective, original magnification ×40) with clustering of atypical, hyperlobated megakaryocytes (hematoxylin and eosin stain in panel C and CD61 immunohistochemical stain in panel D; 20× objective, original magnification ×200), and <2% blasts. Cytogenetics showed 46,XX[20]. Next-generation sequencing revealed SF3B1 K700E (21%) and JAK2 V617F (14%) mutations.
This case is a rare example of myelodysplastic syndrome/myeloproliferative neoplasm with ring sideroblasts and thrombocytosis (MDS/MPN-RS-T) in which no anemia is observed. The 2016 World Health Organization defines the entity as anemia associated with erythroid or multilineage dysplasia, ≥15% ring sideroblasts, <5% marrow blasts, persistent thrombocytosis (≥450 × 109/L), SF3B1 mutation, and exclusion of other MPN, MDS, or certain gene mutations/rearrangements. These patients may have additional alterations, including JAK2 (≤70%), CALR, MPL, ASXL1, DNMT3A, SETBP1, and TET2. The co-occurrence of mutations likely contributes to its complex presentation. The absence of anemia, in the presence of disease-specific mutations along with other major criteria, should not exclude the diagnosis of MDS/MPN-RS-T.
A 76-year-old woman with metastatic lung squamous cell carcinoma after chemoradiation presented for follow-up and was found to have leukocytosis, thrombocytosis, and normal hemoglobin with macrocytosis (white blood cell count, 21.2 × 109/L; platelets, 825 × 109/L; hemoglobin, 12.1 g/dL [normal reference, 11.7-15.5 g/dL]; mean corpuscular volume, 108 fL). Prior blood counts showed similar hemoglobin levels 14 months before (13.0 g/dL) and 2 months after marrow biopsy (12.6 g/dL). Bone marrow evaluation revealed 36% ring sideroblasts (prussian blue iron stain in panel A; 100× objective, original magnification ×1000), hypercellular marrow for age (40% to 50%; hematoxylin and eosin stain in panel B; 4× objective, original magnification ×40) with clustering of atypical, hyperlobated megakaryocytes (hematoxylin and eosin stain in panel C and CD61 immunohistochemical stain in panel D; 20× objective, original magnification ×200), and <2% blasts. Cytogenetics showed 46,XX[20]. Next-generation sequencing revealed SF3B1 K700E (21%) and JAK2 V617F (14%) mutations.
This case is a rare example of myelodysplastic syndrome/myeloproliferative neoplasm with ring sideroblasts and thrombocytosis (MDS/MPN-RS-T) in which no anemia is observed. The 2016 World Health Organization defines the entity as anemia associated with erythroid or multilineage dysplasia, ≥15% ring sideroblasts, <5% marrow blasts, persistent thrombocytosis (≥450 × 109/L), SF3B1 mutation, and exclusion of other MPN, MDS, or certain gene mutations/rearrangements. These patients may have additional alterations, including JAK2 (≤70%), CALR, MPL, ASXL1, DNMT3A, SETBP1, and TET2. The co-occurrence of mutations likely contributes to its complex presentation. The absence of anemia, in the presence of disease-specific mutations along with other major criteria, should not exclude the diagnosis of MDS/MPN-RS-T.
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![A 76-year-old woman with metastatic lung squamous cell carcinoma after chemoradiation presented for follow-up and was found to have leukocytosis, thrombocytosis, and normal hemoglobin with macrocytosis (white blood cell count, 21.2 × 109/L; platelets, 825 × 109/L; hemoglobin, 12.1 g/dL [normal reference, 11.7-15.5 g/dL]; mean corpuscular volume, 108 fL). Prior blood counts showed similar hemoglobin levels 14 months before (13.0 g/dL) and 2 months after marrow biopsy (12.6 g/dL). Bone marrow evaluation revealed 36% ring sideroblasts (prussian blue iron stain in panel A; 100× objective, original magnification ×1000), hypercellular marrow for age (40% to 50%; hematoxylin and eosin stain in panel B; 4× objective, original magnification ×40) with clustering of atypical, hyperlobated megakaryocytes (hematoxylin and eosin stain in panel C and CD61 immunohistochemical stain in panel D; 20× objective, original magnification ×200), and <2% blasts. Cytogenetics showed 46,XX[20]. Next-generation sequencing revealed SF3B1 K700E (21%) and JAK2 V617F (14%) mutations.](https://ash.silverchair-cdn.com/ash/content_public/journal/blood/139/3/10.1182_blood.2021014276/4/m_bloodbld2021014276f1.png?Expires=1765899258&Signature=d~8hjOjP9syMQX9tV3~0sdCrucbZIrqJyY9WmSTJqcRfxD9GGTH11tH4wBIoLgMrMch6xLY55Hoq~FSO7cEjyzdKSRwdInHKpZueZtbBC~idDGbHTyFiRZB9Bn8S775PQsyfHNQNgO~WA3KAgZk3NAmeIsamjr02AWCn9Ztg7VJdZtN87o7O7T2BuDKkf0XDL7298LSLPSTGpm7pjSSyjteu05-R0t-pjy9~yvioq2TnEVPEPNQkOwk7pm~0qG8sWHZnOtT-Vfn4rSAOB8BuhbTC1zMwIT~lXWhi0SuniHqmfuOXF-SaRWEEI22Z6RwjhBeKlLPNCHEC53g7c4jTww__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAIE5G5CRDK6RD3PGA)
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