Yamazaki Y, Horiguchi-Yamada J, Ochi K, Nakada S, Nemoto T, Inaba S, Yamada H
Department of Internal Medicine, Aoto Hospital, Jikei University, School of Medicine.
Rinsho Ketsueki. 1995 Apr;36(4):347-52.
A 70-year-old male was admitted because of anemia in September 1989, and primary myelofibrosis was diagnosed based on the presence of leukoerythroblastosis, a normal chromosomal analysis and pathological findings of fibrosis in bone marrow. Although he was anemic, he did not require any treatment for two years. Then his hematological status deteriorated to severe pancytopenia, and the marrow biopsy revealed marked hypoplasia with fatty replacement and scattered fibrosis. He was treated with metenolon without success and frequent transfusion of packed red cell was required. This hypoplastic status continued for seven months. In May 1992 his WBC count increased gradually with monocytosis. The marrow was filled with various stages of monocytes, with almost no fibrosis remaining. The chromosomal analysis was repeated but disclosed no abnormalities, consistent with the negative result of BCR-ABL rearrangement investigated by the RT-PCR method. One month later, when the patient died of multiple cerebral bleeding and infection, the leukocyte count exceed 90,000/microliters. It is known that major causes of death for patients with primary myelofibrosis are infection, bleeding, cardiac trouble and transformation to leukemia. We describe a case of myelofibrosis who developed to chronic myelomonocytic leukemia following severe aplastic phase.