4.6 Article

Hairy cell leukemia 2022: Update on diagnosis, risk-stratification, and treatment

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue 2, Pages 226-236

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajh.26390

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Hairy cell leukemia and related disorders are characterized by the presence of hairy cells, specific genetic markers, and different clinical courses. Treatment is tailored based on symptoms and may involve chemotherapy with purine analogs or chemo-immunotherapy with rituximab. Management of relapsed disease may involve the use of BRAF or MEK inhibitors, immunoconjugates, or BTK inhibitors, with the optimal sequencing of treatments still to be determined. Bcl-2 inhibitors could play a significant role in the future.
Disease Overview Hairy cell leukemia (HCL) and HCL-like disorders, including HCL variant (HCL-V) and splenic diffuse red pulp lymphoma (SDRPL), are a very heterogeneous group of mature lymphoid B-cell disorders characterized by the identification of hairy cells, a specific genetic profile, a different clinical course, and the need for appropriate treatment. Diagnosis Diagnosis of HCL is based on morphological evidence of hairy cells, an HCL immunologic score of 3 or 4 based on the CD11C, CD103, CD123, and CD25 expression, the trephine biopsy which makes it possible to specify the degree of tumoral medullary infiltration and the presence of BRAF(V600E) somatic mutation. Risk Stratification Progression of patients with HCL is based on a large splenomegaly, leukocytosis, a high number of hairy cells in the peripheral blood, and the immunoglobulin heavy chain variable region gene mutational status. VH4-34-positive HCL cases are associated with a poor prognosis. Treatment Patients should be treated only if HCL is symptomatic. Chemotherapy with risk adapted therapy purine analogs (PNAs) are indicated in first-line HCL patients. The use of chemo-immunotherapy combining PNAs and rituximab (R) represents an increasingly used therapeutic approach. Management of relapsed/refractory disease is based on the use of BRAF inhibitors (BRAFi) plus rituximab or MEK inhibitors (MEKi), recombinant immunoconjugates targeting CD22 or Bruton Tyrosine Kinase inhibitors (BTKi). However, the optimal sequence of the different treatments remains to be determined. The Bcl2-inhibitors (Bcl-2i) can play a major role in the future.

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