4.6 Article

Elevated mature monocytes in bone marrow accompanied with a higher IPSS-R score predicts a poor prognosis in myelodysplastic syndromes

Journal

BMC CANCER
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12885-021-08303-8

Keywords

Mature monocyte in bone marrow; Myelodysplastic syndrome; IPSS-R; Prognosis

Categories

Funding

  1. Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [LY20H080001, LY17H160005]
  2. Medical and Health Science and Technology Projects of Zhejiang Province [2019KY158, 2019KY170, 2019KY171]
  3. National Science Foundation of Ningbo [2018A610390, 2016A610152]
  4. Chinese Medicine Science and Technology Plan Project of Zhejiang Province [2015ZZ018]

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The study found that PMMBM>6% was associated with inferior overall survival (OS), higher-risk IPSS-R, and higher frequency of IDH2 mutation. In addition, age, gender, neutrophil count, bone marrow blast percentage, karyotype, and elevated PMMBM were all independent adverse prognostic factors for OS in MDS.
BackgroundMyelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) is a group of heterogeneous myeloid clonal diseases originating from hematopoietic stem cells. Clinically, elevated mature monocyte in bone marrow is often observed, but its clinical value still remains unclear.MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed a cohort of 216 MDS patients to explore the prognostic value of the percentage of mature monocyte in bone marrow (PMMBM). All patients were divided into elevated PMMBM group and the normal group by 6% PMMBM as the cut-off value.ResultsOur results showed that PMMBM>6% was associated with inferior overall survival (OS) (P=0.026) along with higher-risk IPSS-R (P=0.025) and higher frequency of IDH2 mutation (P=0.007). Multivariate analyses showed that besides older age (>60years) for OS, gender (male) for OS, lower neutrophil count (<0.8x 10(9)/L) for OS, higher bone marrow blast percentage (>5%) for OS and LFS, poorer karyotype for OS, elevated PMMBM was also an independent adverse prognostic factor for OS in MDS (P<0.0001) but not for LFS (P=0.736).ConclusionsThese findings indicate that increased PMMBM may assists Revised International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS-R) to predict a poor outcome and provide a novel evaluation factor for MDS patients especially when their karyotype analyses fail.

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