Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Assessment of dysplastic hematopoiesis: lessons from healthy bone marrow donors

2011; Ferrata Storti Foundation; Volume: 97; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.3324/haematol.2011.056879

ISSN

1592-8721

Autores

S. Parmentier, Johannes Schetelig, Kerstin Lorenz, Michael Krämer, Robin Ireland, Ulrich S. Schuler, Rainer Ordemann, Gabi Rall, Markus Schaich, Martin Bornhäuser, G. Ehninger, Frank Kroschinsky,

Tópico(s)

Bone and Joint Diseases

Resumo

According to WHO 2008 guidelines, the required percentage of cells manifesting dysplasia in the bone marrow to qualify as significant is 10% or over in one or more hematopoietic cell lineages, but this threshold is controversial. No 'normal' values have been established. Therefore, we investigated dyshematopoiesis in bone marrow aspirate squash preparations of 120 healthy bone marrow donors.Bone marrow squash slides of 120 healthy unrelated bone marrow donors were examined independently by 4 experienced morphologists. Samples were taken from the first aspiration during the harvest. Bone marrow preparation and assessment were performed according to WHO recommendations and ICSH guidelines.More than 10% dysmyelopoiesis could be detected in 46% of bone marrow aspirate squash preparations with 26% in 2 or more cell lineages and 7% in 3 cell lineages in healthy bone marrow donors. Donors under the age of 30 years exhibited more dysgranulopoietic changes and dysmegakaryopoietic changes (P<0.001) compared to the older donors. Female donors showed more dysgranulopoietic changes than male donors (P = 0.025). The concordance rate between the 4 investigators was modest in dysgranulopoiesis but poor in dyserythropoiesis and dysmegakaryopoiesis.The poor reliability of the 10% cut off was partly related to the proximity of the current criteria to the observed cut-off mean values of the normal population. These findings question the current WHO threshold of the 10% or over necessary for the percentage of cells manifesting dysplasia to be considered significant, and suggest that either a higher threshold would be more appropriate or different thresholds should be set for each lineage.

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