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Vol. 38. Núm. 4.
Páginas 279-280 (Outubro - Dezembro 2016)
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Vol. 38. Núm. 4.
Páginas 279-280 (Outubro - Dezembro 2016)
Scientific Comment
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New developments in the understanding and diagnosis of myelodysplastic syndromes with ring sideroblasts
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Lorena Bedotti Ribeiro, Erich V. De Paula
Autor para correspondência
erich@unicamp.br

Corresponding author at: Faculty of Medical Sciences, University of Campinas, Rua Tessália Vieira de Camargo, 126, Cidade Universitária Zeferino Vaz, 13083-887 Campinas, SP, Brazil.
Universidade de Campinas (Unicamp), Campinas, SP, Brazil
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Flávia Sacilotto Donaires, Felipe Martelli, Raquel de Melo Alves-Paiva, Silvia Maria Meira Magalhães, Ronald Feitosa Pinheiro, Rodrigo Tocantins Calado
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Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) represent a group of clonal hematopoietic stem cell disorders in which cytopenias of variable severity are associated with dysplastic changes of hematopoietic precursors, and a higher risk of progression to acute myeloid leukemia (AML).1 Besides dysplasia, the presence of ring sideroblasts (RS) has long been recognized as an important morphologic feature of MDS; it used to define a subset of patients within this group. Accordingly, the World Health Organization (WHO) criteria revised in 2008 defined refractory anemia with ring sideroblasts (RA-SR) as a specific MDS subgroup, morphologically characterized by erythroid dysplasia and the presence of at least 15% RS in bone marrow smears.2

However, seminal studies published within the last five years have changed concepts and diagnostic definitions in the field of myeloid malignancies swiftly. Among these studies, made possible by the development of high-throughput sequencing technologies, the description of mutations associated with MDS and AML in large patient cohorts,3–5 followed by the demonstration that some of these mutations are also present (though with a lower allele burden) in individuals without evident hematologic alterations,6–8 led to the proposal of a new pathological category termed clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP).9 This could be conceptually viewed for myeloid neoplasms, as monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance is for multiple myeloma. Furthermore – as explored in a study in this edition of the Revista Brasileira de Hematologia e Hemoterapia (RBHH)10 – these studies also resulted in the description of the first association between an acquired mutation and a specific morphologic abnormality of hematopoietic precursors in MDS.

High-throughput whole genome sequencing studies revealed that mutations in genes involved in RNA splicing are found in ∼45–85% of patients with MDS. In particular, somatic mutations of splicing factor3b subunit 1 (SF3B1) have been identified in ∼60–80% of MDS-RS patients4,5 with an extremely high predictive value for the disease phenotype with RS, as SF3B1 is emerging as the first gene to be strongly associated with a specific morphological feature of MDS.11 Moreover, MDS patients carrying SF3B1 mutations present a fairly homogeneous disease phenotype often characterized by isolated erythroid dysplasia, significant erythroid dysplasia, and high proportion of RS. Even more importantly, these patients present significantly better survival and lower risk of progression to AML.11,12 Together, these data supported a significant change in the revised WHO classification of MDS in 2016, which established that, in the presence of a SF3B1 mutation, a diagnosis of MDS-RS may be defined with RS in as few as 5% of nucleated erythroid cells, with the former threshold of 15% RS reserved for cases lacking a demonstrable SF3B1 mutation.13 These patients will be classified as ‘MDS with single lineage dysplasia and ring sideroblasts (MDS-RSSLD)’ or ‘MDS with multilineage dysplasia and ring sideroblasts (MDS-RSMLD)’.13

It is in this changing context that Donaires et al. present a study in which SF3B1 mutations were screened in 91 MDS patients from two distinct geographical areas of Brazil, using a strategy targeting the most frequently mutated exons of SF3B1 by direct Sanger sequencing.10 In total, 7% of patients presented heterozygous SF3B1 mutations, all of them with RS. The proportion of patients presenting SF3B1 mutations was somewhat lower than reported in Europe and North America, a finding that the authors speculate to be associated with the heterogeneous background of the Brazilian population, or to the fact that only mutation hotspots were evaluated in the SF3B1 gene using their screening strategy. The authors also provide a detailed review of the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which SF3B1 mutations lead to RS, and an in silico simulation of the putative consequences of each mutation that they found in the function of SF3B1 protein.

The quick impact of the identification of the association of SF3B1 mutations with RS on classical diagnostic criteria for MDS illustrate how fast new molecular biology findings can influence the practice of the general hematologist. Well-known challenges in the differential diagnosis of MDS,14 and the prospects that new molecular data also pave the way to improve risk stratification and treatment strategies15 corroborate the importance of studies addressing the molecular pathogenesis of myeloid malignancies and in particular of MDS.

Conflicts of interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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See paper by Donaires et al. in Rev Bras Hematol Hemoter. 2016;38(4):320–324.

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