Nimer Stephen D
Division of Hematologic Oncology and Sloan-Kettering Institute, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA.
Blood. 2008 May 15;111(10):4841-51. doi: 10.1182/blood-2007-08-078139.
There has been a remarkable explosion of knowledge into the molecular defects that underlie the acute and chronic leukemias, leading to the introduction of targeted therapies that can block key cellular events essential for the viability of the leukemic cell. Our understanding of the pathogenesis of the myelodysplastic syndromes (MDSs) has lagged behind, at least in part, because they represent a more heterogeneous group of disorders. The significant immunologic abnormalities described in this disease, coupled with the admixture of MDS stem or progenitor cells within the myriad types of dysplastic and normal cells in the bone marrow and peripheral blood, have made it difficult to molecularly characterize and model MDS. The recent availability of several, effective (ie, FDA-approved) therapies for MDS and newly described mouse models that mimic aspects of the human disease provide an opportune moment to try to leverage this new knowledge into a better understanding of and better therapies for MDS.
对于急性和慢性白血病所基于的分子缺陷,已有显著的知识爆炸式增长,从而带来了能够阻断白血病细胞存活所必需的关键细胞事件的靶向治疗方法。我们对骨髓增生异常综合征(MDS)发病机制的理解至少在一定程度上滞后了,因为它们代表了一组更为异质性的疾病。该疾病中所描述的显著免疫异常,再加上骨髓和外周血中无数类型发育异常和正常细胞内MDS干细胞或祖细胞的混合,使得从分子层面表征和模拟MDS变得困难。最近有几种针对MDS的有效(即美国食品药品监督管理局批准)疗法可供使用,以及新描述的模拟人类疾病某些方面的小鼠模型,为尝试利用这些新知识更好地理解MDS并开发更好的治疗方法提供了一个契机。