The hypomethylating agents azacytidine and decitabine are unaffordable for many patients with MDS. The combination of the DNA methyltransferase inhibitor hydralazine and the histone deacetylase inhibitor valproate has shown preliminary efficacy in MDS. The aim of this study is to evaluate the clinical efficacy and safety of hydralazine/valproate in a case series of MDS patients treated in a compassionate manner. Hydralazine was dosed according to the acetylation genotype of patients (slow acetylators 83 mg daily; fast acetylators 182 mg daily), and valproate was dosed at 30 mg/kg/day. Both drugs were given daily until disease progression. Response and toxicity were evaluated with the International Working Group criteria and CTCAE, version 4, respectively. Survival parameters were estimated with the Kaplan-Meier method. From 2009 to 2012, 14 patients were treated. The median age ± SD was 55.2 ± 19.52 (range 23-87) years. According to the IPSS, cases were graded as intermediate-1 (n = 8/14; 57.2%) or intermediate-2 (n = 6/14; 42.8%). Responses were as follows: five (35.7%) complete response, one (7.1%) partial response, and two (14.28%) became transfusion independent. The mean duration of response ± SD was 60 ± 35.28 months (range 5-94). Three patients progressed to AML. At a median follow-up of 57 months (range 1-106), the median OS was 27 months. At that point, five patients remained on the treatment, one with partial response and four with complete response. The median OS was not reached in the eight patients who saw a clinical benefit from the treatment, in comparison to an OS of 7 months in the six patients who had no treatment. The combination of hydralazine and valproate is safe and effective in MDS, and its further testing is highly desirable.
Rationale:The gene deletion (5)(q22q35) is reported in 10–20% of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) cases and is associated with response to lenalidomide and favorable prognosis. The authors report here a clinical case of MDS transformation to B-cell acute lymphocytic leukemia (B-ALL) with an associated accrual of an additional mutation following treatment with lenalidomide.Patient Concerns:A 69-year-old man presented with progressive anemia, normal white blood cell count, and thrombocytopenia consistent with MDS. He was administered lenalidomide for 27 months, then developed acute B-cell lymphocytic leukemia and acquired a previously unreported mutation in the gene enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2).Diagnoses:After 27 months of therapy with lenalidomide, a surveillance bone marrow aspiration (BMA) revealed 90% cellularity with persistent multilineage dysplasia and a population of blasts comprising 54% of all bone marrow elements by morphology, consistent with B-ALL, even though the patient was asymptomatic. Conventional karyotype showed no signs of del(5)(q22q35) MDS, however bone marrow next–generation sequencing (NGS) demonstrated the accrual of a nonsense mutation (c.211del pL71∗) in exon 3 of EZH2. A confirmatory BMA yielded 70% blasts and clinical features indicative of B-ALL.Interventions:Mini-hyper-CVD (cyclophosphamide and dexamethasone at 50% dose reduction, no anthracycline, methotrexate at 75% dose reduction, cytarabine at 0.5 g/m2 × 4 doses) was administered for 21 days.Outcomes:A follow-up BMA was performed 2 months after mini-hyper-CVD therapy, showing dysplastic features with 25% ring sideroblasts, but no evidence of B-ALL. The patient is currently receiving monthly-low dose decitabine, ofatumumab, and dexamethasone, and is transfusion independent and asymptomatic after 7 cycles.Lessons:The present study shows an extremely rare progression of del(5)(q22q35) MDS to B-ALL with accompanying NGS data and a newly described acquisition of an EZH2 frameshift mutation. This case highlights the importance of NGS as a diagnostic and surveillance tool for MDS.
In this animal model, surfactant administration through a preinserted feeding tube within the LMA lumen is safe and effective while providing the benefits of a minimally invasive approach. This technique reduces the need of PPV and may prevent its potential risks.
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