The Myeloid Malignancies

Clonal proliferation of mature myeloid cells.

  • Key Divide: Philadelphia Chromosome Positive (CML) vs. Negative (PV, ET, PMF).
  • Key Risk: Transformation to Acute Leukaemia (AML) or progression to Myelofibrosis.

1. chronic myeloid leukaemia (cml)

  • Identity: “Too many granulocytes” (Neutrophils, Basophils, Eosinophils).
  • Pathophysiology: t(9;22) Translocation Philadelphia Chromosome BCR-ABL fusion gene.
  • Diagnosis: Peripheral blood PCR for BCR-ABL transcripts.

phase definitions (who vs. eln)

Note: WHO 2022 removed the “Accelerated Phase” (biphasic model), but many clinical trials/guidelines (ELN/MD Anderson) retain the triphasic definition.

PhaseWHO 2022 (Pathology)ELN / MD Anderson (Clinical/Trials)
ChronicBlasts < 20%Blasts < 15%
AcceleratedRemovedBlasts 15–29% OR Basophils 20%
BlastBlasts 20%Blasts 30%

management

  • First Line: Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors (TKIs).
    • Imatinib (1st gen).
    • Dasatinib, Nilotinib (2nd gen) - Preferred if high risk (e.g. ELTS score).
  • Monitoring: Serial BCR-ABL transcript levels (Molecular Response).
  • TKI Adverse Effects:
    • General: Myelosuppression.
    • Dasatinib: Pleural effusions, Pulmonary HTN.
    • Nilotinib: QT prolongation, vascular events (PAOD).

2. polycythaemia vera (pv)

  • Identity: “Too many RBCs” (Independent of EPO).
  • Pathophysiology: JAK2 V617F mutation (>95% of cases).
  • Diagnosis (WHO):
    • Major: Hb > 165 g/L (Men) / > 160 g/L (Women) OR Hct > 0.49/0.48 PLUS Bone Marrow (Hypercellular/Panmyelosis) PLUS JAK2 mutation.
    • Minor: Low serum EPO.
  • S/Sx: Erythromelalgia (burning hands/feet), Aquagenic Pruritus (itchy after shower), Thrombosis (Arterial/Venous).

risk stratification & management

Goal: Prevent thrombosis and haemorrhage.

| Risk Category | Criteria | Treatment | | :--- | : --- | : --- | | Low Risk | Age < 60 AND No Hx of Thrombosis. | Phlebotomy (Target Hct < 0.45) + ASA 81mg. | | High Risk | Age 60 OR Hx of Thrombosis. | As above + Cytoreduction (Hydroxyurea). |

  • Second Line: Interferon (young/pregnant) or Ruxolitinib (JAK inhibitor).

3. essential thrombocythaemia (et)

  • Identity: “Too many platelets”.
  • Pathophysiology: JAK2 (~60%), CALR (~20-25%), or MPL (~3-4%).
  • Diagnosis:
    • Platelets 450 10/L.
    • Biopsy: Hyperlobulated megakaryocytes.
    • Exclusion of reactive causes (Iron deficiency, infection, inflammation).

exam trap: acquired von willebrand syndrome

Extreme thrombocytosis consumes vWF multimers, causing a paradoxical bleeding risk.

  • Definition: “Extreme” is typically 1,000 10/L, but risk is continuous.
  • Action: If Platelets 1,000 (or bleeding Hx), check vWF Activity (Ristocetin Cofactor).
  • Safety: If vWF activity < 30%, HOLD ASA to avoid haemorrhage.

management (revised ipset)

  • Very Low Risk (Age <60, JAK2 neg): Observe or ASA.
  • Low/Intermediate: ASA 81mg.
  • High Risk (Age >60 OR Hx Thrombosis OR JAK2 pos): ASA + Hydroxyurea.

4. primary myelofibrosis (pmf)

  • Identity: “The burnt out marrow.”
  • Pathophysiology: Clonal proliferation Marrow Fibrosis Extramedullary Haematopoiesis.
  • S/Sx: Massive Splenomegaly (spleen takes over production), B-Symptoms (weight loss, fevers).
  • Diagnosis:
    • Peripheral Smear: Leukoerythroblastic picture (nucleated RBCs + left shift) + Teardrop Cells (dacrocytes).
    • Marrow: Significant fibrosis (“Dry Tap”).
    • Genetics: JAK2, CALR, or MPL.

management

  • Curative: Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplant (High risk/Young patients).
  • Symptomatic (Spleen/Constitutional): Ruxolitinib (JAK inhibitor).
  • Supportive: Transfusions, EPO.

related pages: unusual site thrombosis, Acute Myeloid Leukaemia, Splenomegaly