Correction of Severe Myelofibrosis, Impaired Platelet Functions and Abnormalities in a Patient with Gray Platelet Syndrome Successfully Treated by Stem Cell Transplantation
Rémi Favier,
Xavier Roussel,
Sylvain Audia,
Jean Claude Bordet,
Emmanuel De Maistre,
Pierre Hirsch,
Anne Neuhart,
Isabelle Bedgedjian,
Vasiliki Gkalea,
Marie Favier,
Etienne Daguindau,
Paquita Nurden,
Eric Deconinck
Affiliations
Rémi Favier
Armand Trousseau Hospital, Assistance Publique–Hôpitaux de Paris
Xavier Roussel
Besançon Hospital, Franche-Comté University
Sylvain Audia
Dijon-Bourgogne University
Jean Claude Bordet
Lyon hospital
Emmanuel De Maistre
Dijon Hospital
Pierre Hirsch
Inserm, Centre de Recherche Saint-Antoine CRSA, Saint-Antoine Hospital
Anne Neuhart
University Dijon Hospital
Isabelle Bedgedjian
Besançon Hospital, Franche-Comté University
Vasiliki Gkalea
Armand Trousseau Hospital, Assistance Publique–Hôpitaux de Paris
Marie Favier
Armand Trousseau Hospital, Assistance Publique–Hôpitaux de Paris
Gray platelet syndrome (GPS) is an inherited disorder. Patients harboring GPS have thrombocytopenia with large platelets lacking α-granules. A long-term complication is myelofibrosis with pancytopenia. Hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) could be a curative treatment. We report a male GPS patient with severe pancytopenia, splenomegaly and a secondary myelofibrosis needing red blood cells transfusion. He received an HSCT from a 10/10 matched HLA-unrelated donor after a myeloablative conditioning regimen. Transfusion independence occurred at day+21, with a documented neutrophil engraftment. At day+ 180, we added ruxolitinib to cyclosporine and steroids for a moderate chronic graft versus host disease (GVHD) and persistent splenomegaly. At day+240 GVHD was controlled and splenomegaly reduced. Complete donor chimesrism was documented in blood and marrow and platelets functions and morphology normalized. At day+ 720, the spleen size normalized and there was no evidence of marrow fibrosis on the biopsy. In GPS, HSCT may be a curative treatment in selected patients with pancytopenia and myelofibrosis.