4.1 Article

Clinical and genetic features of Japanese cases of MDS associated with VEXAS syndrome

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY
Volume 118, Issue 4, Pages 494-502

Publisher

SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s12185-023-03598-8

Keywords

VEXAS syndrome; MDS; PSL; DNMT3A; TET2

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VEXAS syndrome is a newly discovered disease caused by somatic variants in the UBA1 gene, leading to autoinflammatory disorders and often co-existing with myelodysplastic syndromes. This study investigated the clinical and molecular features of Japanese patients with VEXAS-associated MDS and found that these patients exhibited macrocytic anemia with cytoplasmic vacuoles in myeloid/erythroid precursors. Treatment with prednisolone or cyclosporin A showed significant improvement in anemia, suggesting that the underlying inflammatory milieu induced by VEXAS syndrome may worsen macrocytic anemia in VEXAS-associated MDS.
VEXAS (vacuoles, E1 enzyme, X-linked, autoinflammatory, somatic) syndrome is a new disease entity with autoinflammatory disorders (AID) driven by somatic variants in UBA1 that frequently co-exists with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). Clinicopathological and molecular features of Japanese cases with VEXAS-associated MDS remain elusive. We previously reported high prevalence of UBA1 variants in Japanese patients with relapsing polychondritis, in which 5 cases co-occurred with MDS. Here, we report clinicopathological and variant profiles of these 5 cases and 2 additional cases of MDS associated with VEXAS syndrome. Clinical characteristics of these cases included high prevalence of macrocytic anemia with marked cytoplasmic vacuoles in myeloid/erythroid precursors and low bone marrow (BM) blast percentages. All cases were classified as low or very low risk by the revised international prognostic scoring system (IPSS-R). Notably, 4 out of 7 cases showed significant improvement of anemia by treatment with prednisolone (PSL) or cyclosporin A (CsA), suggesting that an underlying inflammatory milieu induced by VEXAS syndrome may aggravate macrocytic anemia in VEXAS-associated MDS. Targeted deep sequencing of blood samples suggested that MDS associated with VEXAS syndrome tends to involve a smaller number of genes and lower risk genetic lesions than classical MDS.

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