PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Evidence that prefibrotic myelofibrosis is aligned along a clinical and biological continuum featuring primary myelofibrosis.

  • Giovanni Barosi,
  • Vittorio Rosti,
  • Elisa Bonetti,
  • Rita Campanelli,
  • Adriana Carolei,
  • Paolo Catarsi,
  • Antonina M Isgrò,
  • Letizia Lupo,
  • Margherita Massa,
  • Valentina Poletto,
  • Gianluca Viarengo,
  • Laura Villani,
  • Umberto Magrini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0035631
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 4
p. e35631

Abstract

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PurposeIn the WHO diagnostic classification, prefibrotic myelofibrosis (pre-MF) is included in the category of primary myelofibrosis (PMF). However, strong evidence for this position is lacking.Patients and methodsWe investigated whether pre-MF may be aligned along a clinical and biological continuum in 683 consecutive patients who received a WHO diagnosis of PMF.ResultsAs compared with PMF-fibrotic type, pre-MF (132 cases) showed female dominance, younger age, higher hemoglobin, higher platelet count, lower white blood cell count, smaller spleen index and higher incidence of splanchnic vein thrombosis. Female to male ratio and hemoglobin steadily decreased, while age increased from pre-MF to PMF- fibrotic type with early and to advanced bone marrow (BM) fibrosis. Likely, circulating CD34+ cells, LDH levels, and frequency of chromosomal abnormalities increased, while CXCR4 expression on CD34+ cells and serum cholesterol decreased along the continuum of BM fibrosis. Median survival of the entire cohort of PMF cases was 21 years. Ninety-eight, eighty-one and fifty-six percent of patients with pre-MF, PMF-fibrotic type with early and with advanced BM fibrosis, respectively, were alive at 10 years from diagnosis.ConclusionPre-MF is a presentation mode of PMF with a very indolent phenotype. The major consequences of this contention is a new clinical vision of PMF, and the need to improve prognosis prediction of the disease.