Bartram C R
Department of Pediatrics II, University of Ulm, Germany.
Hematol Oncol Clin North Am. 1992 Jun;6(3):557-70.
Myelodysplastic syndromes originate from a pluripotent stem cell. This view, previously suggested by G-6-PD and cytogenetic investigations, has been established unequivocally by X-chromosome inactivation analysis based on DNA polymorphisms and by studies of mutated oncogenes. Two genomic alterations associated with MDS have been analyzed in more detail. Activation of the RAS oncogenes, preferentially N-RAS, is demonstrated in approximately 35% of MDS patients. Mutations in the FMS gene, encoding the CSF-1 receptor, are found in 16% of cases. Interestingly, RAS and FMS mutations are predominantly observed in disorders of myelomonoctic differentiation, i.e., the CMML subtype in MDS and the AML FAB type M4. Moreover, homozygous deletion of the FMS gene may be an important event in the genesis of the MDS variant 5q- syndrome. Preliminary data indicate that defects in tumor-suppressor genes, namely p53, may also contribute to the development of MDS. Different lines of evidence suggest that clinical preleukemia is preceded by a phase in which genetic alterations accumulate without any hematologic change. Cases in point are the detection of RAS and FMS mutations in healthy individuals who had been treated in the past with cytotoxic therapy for lymphoma, the frequent observation of clonal remission in AML patients, or the identification of oncogene mutations in healthy individuals without even a history of malignancy or chemotherapy. Possibly, either germline mutations of oncogenes or tumor-suppressor genes and the process of genomic imprinting may constitute additional factors that predispose hematopoietic stem cells to malignant transformation. Limited as they are, the currently available data suggest that accumulation of genomic lesions, rather than their precise order of development with respect to one another, characterize the multistep process of leukemogenesis in which MDS already represent more advanced stages. The prognostic significance of oncogene mutations in MDS patients is controversially discussed. This issue awaits prospective analyses taking into account the influence of treatment modalities. However, the clinical relevance of molecularly defined parameters has already been established for their use as clonal markers in determining the mode of action and efficiency of different therapeutic approaches.