AI Article Synopsis

  • An 85-year-old Japanese male with MPO-positive acute myeloid leukemia (AML-M1) and megakaryocytic differentiation presented with acute coronary syndrome, leading to poor performance status and no chemotherapy treatment.
  • During the autopsy, significant leukemic infiltration was found in the heart tissue and other organs, with the formation of leukemic thrombi in blood vessels, and megakaryocytic cells noted in various tissues.
  • The study highlights the difference between megakaryocytic differentiation related to tissue factors in AML and acute megakaryoblastic leukemia, while discussing potential mechanisms behind acute coronary syndrome in patients with AML.

Article Abstract

An autopsy case (85-year-old Japanese male) of myeloperoxidase- (MPO-) positive acute myeloid leukemia with maturation (M1) accompanying megakaryocytic differentiation is presented. The patient manifested acute coronary syndrome. Even after emergent percutaneous coronary intervention, his performance status remained poor, so no chemotherapy against leukemia was given. The final white blood cell count reached 291,700/L, and the platelet count was elevated to 510,000/L. No cytogenetic studies were performed. He died at the 25 day of hospitalization. Autopsy revealed marked leukemic infiltration to the endocardium and subendocardial myocardium. Subendocardial myonecrosis was surrounded or replaced by the leukemic blasts, and neither granulation tissue reaction nor fibrosis was observed. In the cardiovascular lumen, lard-like blood clots were formed and microscopically consisted of leukemic blasts and platelets (leukemic thrombi). Infiltration of leukemic blasts was seen in the body cavities and systemic organs including the lung. The MPO-positive blasts lacked azurophilic granules and expressed the stem cell markers, CD34 and CD117 (c-kit). No features of myelofibrosis were seen in the 100% cellular marrow. In the endocardium, liver, lymph nodes, and bone marrow, megakaryocytic cells (CD42b/CD61+, MPO-) were distributed, while the small-sized blastic cells in the blood and tissues predominantly expressed MPO. The blasts lacked expression of CD42b/CD61. Megakaryocytic differentiation might be stimulated by certain tissue factors. AML accompanying megakaryocytic differentiation in certain tissues and organs should be distinguished from acute megakaryoblastic leukemia. The mechanisms provoking acute coronary syndrome in acute myeloid leukemia are discussed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7525322PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8886298DOI Listing

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