BackgroundAcute erythroid leukaemia (AEL) is a rare subtype of acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), constituting <5% of all the cases of AML. The World Health Organization (WHO) in 2001 classified AEL into two types: (1) erythroid/myeloid leukaemia which required ≥50% erythroid precursors with ≥20% of the non-erythroid cells to be myeloid blasts and (2) pure erythroleukemia (pEL) with ≥80% erythroblasts. The WHO 2008 classification kept these subcategories, but made erythroleukemia a diagnosis of exclusion. There are very few studies on the clinico haematological and cytogenetic profile of this disease, considering the rarity of its occurrence and poor prognosis.Materials and methodsThis study was done by retrospective analysis of data from 32 case files of patients diagnosed with AEL. Clinical details noted down were the demographic profile, peripheral blood smear details and bone marrow examination details: (1) blasts-erythroblasts and myeloblasts, (2) dysplasia in the cell lineages and (3) cytogenetic abnormalities.ResultsThe most common presenting symptom was fever. Pancytopenia at presentation was seen in 81.25% of patients. Dysplasia was observed in bone marrow in 100% of erythroblasts and in 40% of myeloblasts in erythroid/myeloid subtype. In pure myeloid subtype, myeloid and megakaryocytic dysplasias were not obvious. Complex karyotype was noticed only in patients of pEL.ConclusionAEL is a rare group of heterogeneous diseases with many neoplastic and non-neoplastic conditions mimicking the diagnosis. The clinical presentation and cytogenetics are also non-specific, presenting additional challenges to the diagnosis.
Mutation analysis of the KRAS oncogene is established as a predictive biomarker in Colorectal cancer (CRC). Many prospective clinical trials have shown that only CRCs with wild-type KRAS respond to anti-epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) treatment. Hence, mutation analysis is mandatory before treatment of metastatic CRCs. There are very few studies on the KRAS mutation status in the Indian setting. Hence, this study was done to document the patterns of KRAS mutations in CRCs reporting to a regional cancer centre in South India. Among 150 cases of metastatic colorectal cancer reporting over a period of 20 months, 48 random cases were analyzed for the KRAS mutational status of codons 12 and 13 of the KRAS gene by genomic sequencing. KRAS mutations in codons 12 and 13 were present in 9/48 (18.75%) of all analyzed CRCs. The common types of mutations were glycine to aspartate on codon 12 (p.G12D), glycine to valine on codon 12 (p.G12 V), and glycine to aspartate on codon 13 (p.G13D).
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