Abstract
Leukemia is observed with increased frequency in patients with severe congenital neutropenia (SCN). In the past decade, recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rh G-CSF) has prolonged the survival of patients with SCN increasingly reported to have leukemias. In this communication acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) associated with a mutation of the G-CSF receptor (G-CSF-R) developed in a patient with SCN maintained on long-term G-CSF therapy. The blast count in the blood and bone marrow fell to undetectable levels twice on withholding G-CSF and without chemotherapy administration, but the mutant G-CSF-R was detectable during this period. The patient subsequently underwent successful allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. After transplantation, the patient's neutrophil elastase (ELA-2) mutation and G-CSF-R mutation became undetectable by polymerase chain reaction. This report provides novel insights on leukemia developing in congenital neutropenia.
Introduction
Severe congenital neutropenia (SCN), first described by Kostmann in 1956, is a disorder of myelopoiesis characterized by impaired neutrophil differentiation with maturation arrest at the promyelocyte stage.1,2 The resultant profound neutropenia usually leads to fatal infections early in infancy, but in a few instances it has remitted or has been mild enough to allow prolonged survival. Transition to leukemia has been reported in 3 patients who survived through adolescence with no cytokine treatment.3-5 Bone marrow transplantation was the only effective therapy to prolong the survival of patients with SCN6,7 until granulocyte–colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) was introduced.8-10 However, an apparent increase in the incidence of leukemia has also been observed in the past few years.11,12 This phenomenon could be related to prolonged survival of children who have a preleukemic disorder, thus allowing the disease to follow its natural course. Prolonged hematopoietic stimulation with G-CSF has also been suggested to contribute to the development of leukemia.13-15 We present a patient with SCN in whom acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) developed after 9 years of G-CSF treatment. The leukemia remitted spontaneously with the discontinuation of G-CSF alone, allowing the patient to receive a successful unrelated bone marrow transplant without the morbidity of induction chemotherapy.
Study design
M.P. is a 12-year-old boy who received a diagnosis of severe neutropenia at the age of 3 months. There is no family history of consanguinity or hematologic disorders. During the first 3 years of his life, he was admitted to the hospital more then 30 times for life-threatening infections. At age 3, G-CSF treatment was begun, and the patient was maintained on 5 μg/kg subcutaneously twice a day. He responded excellently to G-CSF, allowing him to lead a normal life for 9 years. On March 17, 1999, a surveillance bone marrow aspirate was within normal limits with a diploid male karyotype (46,XY) in 20 metaphases. On June 8, 1999, severe left otitis associated with extensive cellulitis developed on the left side of the face. Complete blood count showed hemoglobin 11.0, platelets 153 000, white blood cell count 11 800, and 32% myeloperoxidase-positive blasts. Bone marrow aspirate confirmed the diagnosis of AML with 73% blasts, myeloperoxidase positive, CD34 97.5%, CD13 92.6%, and CD33 31.4%. Cytogenetics assay showed a pseudodiploid clone 46,XY, add (18) (q23), in 18 metaphases and a diploid male karyotype 46,XY in 2 metaphases. G-CSF was discontinued, and the patient begun treatment with intravenous antibiotics. After 5 days, the infection had markedly improved and the white blood cell count gradually decreased. Because of the patient's stable clinical condition and the clearance of circulating blasts, the decision was made not to begin chemotherapy and to continue withholding G-CSF while maintaining close observation and prophylactic antibiotics. After 4 weeks without G-CSF, a repeat bone marrow aspirate documented complete morphologic and cytogenetic remission that lasted for 11 weeks, at which time the family declined bone marrow transplantation and restarted the patient on 3 μg/kg G-CSF twice a day to maintain his absolute neutrophil count in the 1000 range. A surveillance bone marrow aspirate taken 7 weeks after G-CSF was restarted showed 40% myeloperoxidase-positive blasts with reappearance of the old 18q+ clone and a new clone with trisomy 21. G-CSF administration was interrupted again, and the patient achieved a second remission in 14 days without chemotherapy. After 6 weeks in complete remission, he underwent matched, unrelated bone marrow transplantation. Six months after transplantation, the leukemia remains in remission.
Cytochemical assays, flow cytometry studies, and cytogenetic analysis were performed on bone marrow aspirates using standard methology.16 Neutrophil elastase (ELA-2) and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor receptor (G-CSF-R) were analyzed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and reverse transcription (RT)-PCR using genomic DNA and RNA, respectively. All 5 exons for ELA-2 were sequenced as previously reported.17 For G-CSF-R analysis, the entire intracellular domain was sequenced.
Results and discussion
Although it allows a dramatic improvement in quality of life and survival, the prolonged use of G-CSF in children with SCN has been associated with adverse side effects that vary in severity.18 In some cases, it is difficult to determine whether the complications are associated with the underlying pathophysiology of the disease, are induced by G-CSF, or are related to a combination of both.
The greatest concern is the risk for hematopoietic malignancies. In these patients, treatment is difficult and most patients die within a few months despite the use of aggressive chemotherapy.19-22 The latest report from the Severe Chronic Neutropenia International Registry indicates that the incidence of myelodysplastic syndrome and AML is almost 9% in patients with SCN receiving G-CSF.23 Malignant myeloid disorders have not been reported11 18 in patients with idiopathic or cyclic neutropenia maintained on long-term treatment with G-CSF and followed up or the same period, indicating that the risk for leukemic transformation is probably a function of the underlying myelopoietic defect rather than a direct effect of growth-factor treatment.
The case we present here is the first to demonstrate a direct relation between G-CSF administration and blast count in a patient with SCN. In this patient, who has had SCN since infancy and who manifests the recently reported mutation of the gene for neutrophil elastase, AML developed in association with a clonal cytogenetic abnormality after 9 years of treatment with G-CSF. The patient had morphologic and cytogenetic remission on discontinuation of G-CSF, but a mutation of G-CSF-R was detectable in 2 samples from the 3-month remission period (Table 1).
G-CSF is known to mediate its effect by G-CSF-R. On ligand binding, the G-CSF-R is dimerized and stimulates cell proliferation or differentiation by activating various signaling pathways.24 Current evidence25 indicates that mutations in G-CSF-R lead to hypersensitivity to G-CSF with robust proliferation of the host cells. In this patient, we examined bone marrow by PCR and RT-PCR using G-CSF-R–specific primers. Sequencing of the corresponding PCR-amplified fragments revealed a point mutation in G-CSF-R coding region (manuscript in preparation). The same G-CSF-R mutation was detected at 2 different time points when the patient was off G-CSF (Table 1). Examination of PCR-amplified bone marrow-derived genomic DNA from this patient also revealed a point mutation in the coding region of neutrophil elastase17(Table 1).
Overt leukemia recurred 7 weeks after G-CSF treatment was resumed. Cell surface markers were identical to those at diagnosis, and cytogenetic test results confirmed the reappearance of the old abnormal clone in addition to the emergence of a new clone (Table 1). A second morphologic remission was achieved 14 days after G-CSF was again stopped, and it lasted until the patient underwent bone marrow transplantation 6 weeks later. After transplantation, both the elastase and the G-CSF-R mutations were no longer detectable (Table1).
The G-CSF expansion of the blast count in this patient is consistent with models in which selection and maturation of individual hematopoietic lineages are stimulated by hematopoietic growth factors. The mechanism that allowed this patient's leukemia to remain quiescent when pharmacologic doses of G-CSF were withdrawn deserves further study. The G-CSF-R mutation persisted despite the variations in blast count. Additional studies may clarify the relation between this mutation and the underlying mutation of the gene for neutrophil elastase in the pathophysiology of SCN. This patient did not have monosomy 7, a frequent marker of AML in patients with SCN. We recommend that in patients with congenital neutropenia and AML, G-CSF be withheld, if the clinical condition allows, so that they may be observed off G-CSF before chemotherapy is begun.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section 1734.
References
Author notes
Sima Jeha, Department of Pediatrics, University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Box 87, 1515 Holcombe Boulevard, Houston, TX 77030; e-mail: sjeha@mdanderson.org.