AI Article Synopsis

  • - The case involves a patient with severe thrombocytosis, where no secondary causes were identified, and although there were no signs of myelofibrosis, the patient's megakaryocytes were notably small and abnormal.
  • - Genetic analysis revealed a novel calreticulin (CALR) mutation (C105S), alongside mutations in ASXL1, U2AF1, and EZH2, all found in myeloid cells, leading to a diagnosis of myelodysplastic syndrome/myeloproliferative neoplasm (MDS/MPN).
  • - Treatment with hydroxycarbamide was initiated due to high thrombosis risk, but as the patient's condition worsened, additional mutations (SETBP

Article Abstract

We describe the case of a patient with extreme thrombocytosis whose evolution was rapidly fatal. No cause of secondary thrombocytosis was found. There was no sign of myelofibrosis but the megakaryocytes were small and dysplastic. The patient presented a calreticulin (CALR) variant in exon 3 (C105S), as well as concomitant mutations of ASXL1, U2AF1, and EZH2. This variant of CALR has never been described before, and after sorting, all identified mutations were found in myeloid cells but not in lymphoid cells. Therefore, the diagnosis of a frontier case of myelodysplastic syndrome/myeloproliferative neoplasm (MDS/MPN) was made. A treatment with hydroxycarbamide was started because of a high risk of thrombosis. Upon worsening of the hematological status two new mutations appeared, SETBP1 and ETV6, and the CALR mutation was still detectable, as well as the three other mutations found in the chronic stage. Our results show that this variant could contribute to MDS/MPN pathogenesis in that patient.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ejh.14126DOI Listing

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