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Classification

Authoring team

In 1982 the French-American-British (FAB) group developed a classification system for myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) according to morphological criteria:

SUB-TYPE

DISTINGUISHING FEATURES IN MARROW

Refractory anaemia

< 5% blasts

Refractory anaemia + ringed sideroblasts

< 5% blasts; ringed sideroblasts > 15%

Refractory anaemia + excess blasts

5-20% blasts

Refractory anaemia + blasts in transformation

20-30% blasts

Chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia

blood monocytes > 1 x 10^9/l

 

The World Health Organisation (WHO) have produced a revised classification for MDS (1)

  • in this classification system refractory anemia (RA) and sideroblastic anemia (RARS) have been more strictly defined, including only cases with a predominance of cell atypias in the erythroid lineage
  • chronic myelomonocytic leukemia is reclassified under a separate category
  • a new category refractory cytopenias with multilineage dysplasias (RCMD) has been defined as MDS presenting less than bone marrow (BM) blasts, but showing cell atypias in more than 10% in two or three hemopoietic cell lines
  • the new classification also includes as a separate entity the 5q-syndrome
  • a category "unclassified" has been created in order to include cases with peripheral cytopenias, discrete atypias in granulocytes and/or megakaryocytes and BM blasts lower than 5%
  • in addition to the pathologic classification, various prognostic predictors were formatted into scoring systems. BM blast percentage, cytopenias, and cytogenetics are the backbone for those prognostic models. The International Prognostic Scoring System is a product of pooled data from previous scoring systems and a useful tool to predict survival and acute myelogenous leukemia evolution

Reference:

  1. J.W. Vardiman, N.L. Harris and R.D. Brunning, The World Health Organization classification of the myeloid neoplasms. Blood 100 (2002), pp. 2292–2302.
  2. Komrokji R, Bennet JM. The myelodysplastic syndromes: classification and prognosis. Curr Hematol Rep. 2003 May;2(3):179-85. Review.

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