Nineteen patients with high‐risk myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS)/acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) received fludarabine, cytarabine, granulocyte‐colony stimulating factor (G‐CSF), and idarubicin chemotherapy (de novo MDS/MDS‐AML, nine; relapsed/refractory MDS/AML, seven; therapy‐related MDS, three). Median age was 44 years and median disease duration 10 months. 16/19 (84%) patients had abnormal cytogenetics with seven (37%) harbouring abnormalities of chromosome 7. 18/19 (94.7%) patients responded to FLAG‐idarubicin with 12 (63%) achieving complete remission (CR) (<5% blasts and normal cytogenetics). 7/9 (78%) patients with de novo MDS/MDS‐AML achieved CR compared to 5/10 (50%) with alternative diagnoses. Response was associated with age < 50 years, disease duration < 3 months, and cytogenetics other than abnormalities of chromosome 7. Haemopoietic regeneration was rapid in most patients and there were no toxic deaths. Nine patients received a second course of chemotherapy, three have proceeded to allogeneic bone marrow transplant and three to autologous blood stem cell/bone marrow transplantation. Follow‐up is short (median 10 months). 12/19 (63%) patients remain alive and 5/12 (42%) have relapsed at a median 5 months following CR achievement. FLAG‐idarubicin was well tolerated. High rates of morphological and cytogenetic remission, especially in de novo MDS, offer a window of opportunity for assessment of autologous BMT in this group of diseases where no treatment except alloBMT has led to prolongation of survival.
Dapsone is widely used in dermatological practice. The case of a Greek female patient is reported who had a severe, acute, haemolytic episode shortly after commencing dapsone therapy, despite a normal glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) screening test. A subsequent quantitative assay revealed reduced levels of G6PD consistent with the heterozygous state. This illustrates that routine screening tests may fail to detect the decreased levels of (G6PD) which occur in female heterozygotes. Since these patients are at risk of severe dapsone-induced haemolysis, the need for quantitative G6PD assays in females from susceptible racial groups is emphasized.
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