Abstract
Background: ET is considered as a hematopoietic stem cell disorder, closely related to polycythemia vera (PV). Several studies in female ET patients, using XCIPs analysis, have shown the persistence of polyclonal patterns in a subset of patients, the significance of this finding being unclear (
Methods: We looked for V617F JAK2 mutation in whole blood DNA in a series of 43 ET female patients for whom XCIPs had previously been reported by our group (
Results: V617F JAK2 mutation was found in 12 of the 43 samples (28%), in agreement with recent reports. No significant differences were found between JAK2 mutated and non-mutated patients for age (43 vs 57 years), clinical symptoms at presentation (33% vs 35%), platelet count (866 vs 907 G/l), or cytoreductive therapy (41% vs 61%), respectively. Of the 35 patients with a monoclonal pattern in granulocytes (and polyclonal T lymphocytes), 8 (23%) had JAK2 mutation, as compared to 4 of the 8 patients (50%) with polyclonal pattern in granulocytes (p=0.185, Fisher’s exact test).
Conclusion: The 50% incidence of JAK2 mutation we found in ET patients with a polyclonal pattern of hematopoiesis may be due to a better sensitivity of the JAK2 mutation assay by comparison to XCIPs clonality assays. It shows that many ET with a XCIPs polyclonal pattern are in fact clonal disorders. On the other hand, the absence of JAK2 mutation in about 75% of patients with a monoclonal pattern suggests that other molecular events can lead to clonal megakaryocytic proliferation in a large proportion of ET patients.
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