Publications by authors named "Gitte B Kerndrup"

Clonal hematopoiesis (CH) denotes somatic mutations in genes related to myeloid neoplasms present at any variant allele frequency (VAF). Clonal hematopoiesis is associated with increasing age and with a factor 6 increase in the risk of developing therapy-related myeloid neoplasms (tMNs) following autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT). However, the impact of specific mutations on progression from CH to tMN has yet to be unraveled, and it remains unclear whether mutations directly impact or even drive the development of tMN.

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Background: The hallmark of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) remains dysplasia in the bone marrow (BM). However, diagnosing MDS may be challenging and subject to inter-observer variability. Thus, there is an unmet need for novel objective, standardized and reproducible methods for evaluating dysplasia.

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Therapy-related myeloid neoplasms (tMN) develop after exposure to cytotoxic and radiation therapy, and due to their adverse prognosis, it is of paramount interest to identify patients at high risk. The presence of clonal hematopoiesis has been shown to increase the risk of developing tMN. The value of analyzing hematopoietic stem cells harvested at leukapheresis before autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) with next-generation sequencing and immunophenotyping represents potentially informative parameters that have yet to be discovered.

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Evidence of distinct disease propagating stem cells in myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) has emerged in recent years. However, immunophenotypic characterization of these cancer stem cells remains sparse. In acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), we have previously described aberrant expression of the C-type lectin domain family 12, member A (CLEC12A) as a stable and reliable marker of leukaemia blasts and as a tool for assessing minimal residual disease.

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An association between hepatitis and aplastic anemia (AA) is known as hepatitis-associated AA, and is characterized by an acute attack of hepatitis followed by the development of AA. We report 2 clinical cases of acute seronegative hepatitis in which pancytopenia with mild dysplasia developed after 3 months; however, neither of our cases fulfilled the histological criteria of AA, but rather myelodysplastic syndrome. This novel association bears considerable resemblance to hepatitis-associated AA, and raises the question of whether hepatitis-associated dysmyelopoiesis should be included in the spectrum of hypocellular myelodysplastic syndrome.

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Refractory cytopenia of childhood is the most common subtype of myelodysplastic syndrome in children. In this study, we compared the outcome of immunosuppressive therapy using horse antithymocyte globulin (n=46) with that using rabbit antithymocyte globulin (n=49) in 95 patients with refractory cytopenia of childhood and hypocellular bone marrow. The response rate at 6 months was 74% for horse antithymocyte globulin and 53% for rabbit antithymocyte globulin (P=0.

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During a 15-year period, 161 adult patients were diagnosed with secondary acute myeloid leukemia (s-AML) in the region of Southern Denmark. In 73 patients, the AML diagnosis was preceded by myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS-AML), in 31 patients by an antecedent hematologic disease, and in 57 patients by treatment with chemotherapy and/or irradiation (t-AML). Cytogenetic analysis was carried out in 93%, of which 61% had clonal chromosome aberrations.

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Background: Several laboratories have shown that cells with a memory B-cell phenotype can have the same clonotype as multiple myeloma tumor cells.

Design And Methods: The aim of this study was to determine whether some memory B cells have the same genetic alterations as their corresponding multiple myeloma malignant plasma cells. The methodology included sorting multiple myeloma or memory B cells into RNA stabilizing medium for generation of subset-specific polymerase chain reaction complementary DNA libraries from one or 100 cells.

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Osteolytic bone disease (OBD) in multiple myeloma (MM) is caused by interactions between MM cells and the bone marrow microenvironment and is characterized by increased osteoclastic bone resorption and decreased osteoblastic bone formation. Recently, the role of osteoblast inhibition has come into focus, especially the possible role of overexpression of DKK1, an inhibitor of the Wnt signalling pathway. Further, CKS2, PSME2 and DHFR have also been reported as candidate genes for OBD.

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Interphase fluorescence in-situ hybridization (i-FISH) was used to investigate 192 patients with multiple myeloma (MM; n = 182) and benign monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS; n = 10). Of the 182 MM cases, 132 were investigated without and 50 with positive plasma cell identification (PC-ID+); 134 were investigated at diagnosis, 32 at time of progression, 7 at time of relapse, and 9 were investigated with partial remission or no response. The FISH analysis detected 11q23 (n = 61), 13q13 approximately q14 (n = 181), 14q32 (n = 121), 17p13.

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Chromosomal aberrations in polycythemia vera (PV) are heterogenous and nonrandom. A prognostic predictive value of these aberrations has not been established. The V617F mutation in the JAK2 gene on chromosome 9p24.

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The Philadelphia-negative chronic myeloproliferative disorders feature autonomous myeloid hyperproliferation and hypersensitivity to a number of growth factors, which most recently have been shown to be explained by a guanine-to-thymidine mutation in the Janus tyrosine kinase (JAK2) gene, implicating that phenylalanine is substituted with valine in position 617 (V617F mutation). JAK2 is of particular importance to haematopoiesis, since JAK2 proteins are activated mainly by the haematopoietic growth factors. The JAK2 mutation is present in most patients with polycythaemia vera and about 50% of patients with essential thrombocytosis and idiopathic myelofibrosis.

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PRV-1 is a new molecular marker within the Ph-negative chronic myeloproliferative disorders. PRV-1 is a useful, highly sensitive and specific marker in the differentiation between polycythaemia vera (PV) and secondary erythrocytosis (ET), and seems to identify those PV patients presenting in the early phase of the disease with dominating thrombocytosis and thus a clinical phenotype of ET. These PRV-1 positive ET patients can be regarded as having "masked" PV or, more accurately, as having early PV.

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We investigated 150 acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients and 48 acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients by multiplex RT-PCR to 7evaluate the adjuvant diagnostic effect, vis-à-vis G-banding and spectral karyotyping (SKY), and the potentials of this method for providing means for monitoring residual disease by real-time quantitative RT-PCR. An abnormal G-banded karyotype was found in 57% of AML and 68% of ALL cases. Ninety-six patients were investigated by SKY in parallel which extended or confirmed the G-banding finding in 94/96 cases.

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Lipoblastomatous tumours are rare, and they occur primarily in children younger than 3 years of age. They are benign and may be divided in lipoblastomas and lipoblastomatosis. A case with cervical lipoblastoma causing respiratory difficulty is reported, and a clinical characterisation of patients with lipoblastomatous tumours in the neck is presented.

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During a 10-year period (1992-2001) in the region of Southern Denmark, 337 patients aged 15 years or older (range 16-93 years, median 67 years) were diagnosed with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). Cytogenetic analysis was carried out in 90%, of whom 53% had clonal chromosome aberrations. Some 24% and 31% had only numerical or structural abnormalities respectively.

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The development of human cytogenetics has gained momentum during the past 20 years and many chromosome aberrations have been described to be specifically associated with more than 60 constitutional syndromes and more than 27,000 acquired neoplastic diseases. Chromosome analysis has in later years been further refined by the application of fluorescent in situ hybridisation technologies which enables the detection of genetic rearrangements, depending on the method employed down to single gene levels. Chromosome analysis is not only important in the diagnostic situation, but even more so in the prognostication of a wide range of diseases and especially with regard to malignant diseases in the follow-up to monitor treatment response.

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