Haematologica (Aug 2011)

Myelodysplasia in autosomal dominant and sporadic monocytopenia immunodeficiency syndrome: diagnostic features and clinical implications

  • Katherine R. Calvo,
  • Donald C. Vinh,
  • Irina Maric,
  • Weixin Wang,
  • Pierre Noel,
  • Maryalice Stetler-Stevenson,
  • Diane C. Arthur,
  • Mark Raffeld,
  • Amalia Dutra,
  • Evgenia Pak,
  • Kyungjae Myung,
  • Amy P. Hsu,
  • Dennis D. Hickstein,
  • Stefania Pittaluga,
  • Steven M. Holland

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2011.041152
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 96, no. 8

Abstract

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A novel, genetic immunodeficiency syndrome has been recently described, herein termed “MonoMAC”. It is characterized by severe circulating monocytopenia, NK- and B-lymphocytopenia, severe infections with M. avium complex (MAC), and risk of progression to myelodysplasia/acute myelogenous leukemia. Detailed bone marrow analyses performed on 18 patients further define this disorder. The majority of patients had hypocellular marrows with reticulin fibrosis and multilineage dysplasia affecting the myeloid (72%), erythroid (83%) and megakaryocytic (100%) lineages. Cytogenetic abnormalities were present in 10 of 17 (59%). Despite B-lymphocytopenia, plasma cells were present but were abnormal (e.g. CD56+) in nearly half of cases. Increased T-cell large granular lymphocyte populations were present in 28% of patients. Chromosomal breakage studies, cell cycle checkpoint functions, and sequencing of TERT and K-RAS genes revealed no abnormalities. MonoMAC appears to be a unique, inherited syndrome of bone marrow failure. We describe distinctive bone marrow features to help in its recognition and diagnosis. (Clinicaltrials.gov identifiers: NCT00018044, NCT00923364, NCT01212055)