The global crisis of antibiotic resistance has reached a point where, if action is not taken, human medicine will enter a postantibiotic world and simple injuries could once again be life threatening. New antibiotics are needed urgently, but better use of existing agents is just as important. More appropriate use of antibiotics in medicine is vital, but the extensive use of antibiotics outside medical settings is often overlooked. Antibiotics are commonly used in animal husbandry, bee-keeping, fish farming and other forms of aquaculture, ethanol production, horticulture, antifouling paints, food preservation, and domestically. This provides multiple opportunities for the selection and spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Given the current crisis, it is vital that the nonmedical use of antibiotics is critically examined and that any nonessential use halted.
Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) is the commonest indication for allogeneic stem cell transplantation (allo-SCT) worldwide. The increasingly important role of allo-SCT in the management of AML has been underpinned by two important advances. Firstly, improvements in disease risk stratification utilizing genetic and Measurable Residual Disease (MRD) technologies permit ever more accurate identification of allo-mandatory patients who are at high risk of relapse if treated by chemotherapy alone. Secondly, increased donor availability coupled with the advent of reduced intensity conditioning (RIC) regimens has substantially expanded transplant access for patients with high risk AML In patients allografted for AML disease relapse continues to represent the commonest cause of transplant failure and the development of novel strategies with the potential to reduce disease recurrence represents a major unmet need.
ANKRD26
is a highly conserved gene located on chromosome 10p12.1 which has shown to play a role in normal megakaryocyte differentiation.
ANKRD26
-related thrombocytopenia, or thrombocytopenia 2, is an inherited thrombocytopenia with mild bleeding diathesis resulting from point mutations the 5ʹUTR of the
ANKRD26
gene. Point mutations in the 5ʹUTR region have been shown to prevent transcription factor-mediated downregulation of
ANKRD26
in normal megakaryocyte differentiation. Patients with
ANKRD26
-related thrombocytopenia have a predisposition to developing hematological malignancies, with acute myeloid leukemia and myelodysplastic syndrome most commonly described in the literature. We review the clinical features and biological mechanisms of
ANKRD26
-related thrombocytopenia and summarize known cases in the literature.
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