2004
DOI: 10.2169/internalmedicine.43.540
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Myelofibrosis with Myeloid Metaplasia: New Developments in Pathogenesis and Treatment

Abstract: Myeloid metaplasia with myelofibrosis (MMM) is a chronic myeloproliferative disorder (CMPD) characterized by progressive anemia, massive splenomegaly, both hepatosplenic and non-hepatosplenic extramedullary hematopoiesis (EMH), a leukoerythroblastic blood smear, circulating progenitor cells, and marked bone marrow stromal reaction including collagen fibrosis, osteosclerosis and angiogenesis. The overall median survival is 5 years although it might range from 2 to 15 years depending on the presence or absence o… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(29 citation statements)
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References 86 publications
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“…Additionally, scrutinized evaluations of follow-up studies including BM examinations were in keeping with a stepwise evolution of the disease process starting with a prefibrotic precursor stage and progressing over many years into overt MMM [103,106,107,109,110,[112][113][114]. Concerning the dynamics of disease process in PMF, the former gold standard for the diagnosis of MMM [6,22,23,89,115,116] or agnogenic myeloid metaplasia (AMM) should be avoided, because these criteria include only the advanced or overt stages of a wide spectrum of clinical and morphological disease manifestations [102]. Particularly, to underscore the fact that overt myelofibrosis is not a necessary diagnostic feature of this MPN category, the term PMF was recommended to the WHO by the International Working Group on Myelofibrosis [117].…”
Section: Primary Myelofibrosismentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Additionally, scrutinized evaluations of follow-up studies including BM examinations were in keeping with a stepwise evolution of the disease process starting with a prefibrotic precursor stage and progressing over many years into overt MMM [103,106,107,109,110,[112][113][114]. Concerning the dynamics of disease process in PMF, the former gold standard for the diagnosis of MMM [6,22,23,89,115,116] or agnogenic myeloid metaplasia (AMM) should be avoided, because these criteria include only the advanced or overt stages of a wide spectrum of clinical and morphological disease manifestations [102]. Particularly, to underscore the fact that overt myelofibrosis is not a necessary diagnostic feature of this MPN category, the term PMF was recommended to the WHO by the International Working Group on Myelofibrosis [117].…”
Section: Primary Myelofibrosismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The presence of the JAK2V617F mutation in precursor stages of PMF does not exert a specific diagnostic impact, because it may be found in about 50% of patients [11,91]. A remarkable point is that progression of prodromal PMF into MMM/AMM [6,22,115,116] is not triggered by the JAK2V617F mutation status, but by a number of relevant target genes that are involved in matrix modeling and regulation of fibrillogenesis [119]. Clinical data in these prodromal stages of PMF are usually characterized by only minimal abnormalities as borderline to slight anemia, minimal splenomegaly, a very low or missing peripheral blast count but often a conspicuous thrombocytosis [93,98,102,103,106,107,[109][110][111]120] as shown in Table III.…”
Section: Primary Myelofibrosismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since the incidence of MF in first 10 years is low and it is usually manifested in patients with a long duration of disease, the occurrence of MF is rather early in our patient and may suggest an aggressive subgroup [4]. Among chronic myeloproliferative disorders, EMH is most commonly seen in idiopathic MF since it is associated with the highest rate of bone marrow fibrosis (up to 80 % at presentation) and circulating progenitor cells [5,6]. Foci of EMH are most commonly found in the spleen, liver and lymph nodes, but may also infrequently occur at other sites as kidney, adrenal glands, pleura and peritoneum [7][8][9][10][11].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 71%
“…This causes a decrease in ploidy and cell size and an increase in the number of promegakaryoblasts [79]. Its use in CIMF has been advocated on the basis of the important role that megakaryocytes play in the pathogenesis of CIMF by secreting cytokines that promote fibrosis and osteosclerosis [80]. Improvement in platelet counts was observed in 13 of 20 patients with advanced CIMF treated with anagrelide in a trial conducted by Yoon et al [81].…”
Section: Anagrelidementioning
confidence: 99%