Table 1

Clinical features in the 57 FA patients

FeatureN
Age, y  
    ≤ 18 (range, 4-18) 29 
    > 18 (range, 19-56) 28 
Sex  
    Female 31 
    Male 26 
Consanguinity*  
    Yes 15 
    No 38 
    Unknown 
Constitutional FANC genes mutations  
    FANCA 48 
    FANCG 
    FANCF 
    FANCD2 
    FANCD1/BRCA2 
    FANCJ/BACH1/BRIP1 
    Unknown 
BM morphology  
    Normal 
    MH/AA 20 
        MH 12 
        AA 
    Myelodysplasia 18 
        RT 
        RARS 
        RCUD 
        RCMD 
        RAEB-1 
        RAEB-2 
        MDS-U 
    AML 11 
Karyotype  
    Abnormal 29 
    Normal 24 
    Mitosis failure 
FeatureN
Age, y  
    ≤ 18 (range, 4-18) 29 
    > 18 (range, 19-56) 28 
Sex  
    Female 31 
    Male 26 
Consanguinity*  
    Yes 15 
    No 38 
    Unknown 
Constitutional FANC genes mutations  
    FANCA 48 
    FANCG 
    FANCF 
    FANCD2 
    FANCD1/BRCA2 
    FANCJ/BACH1/BRIP1 
    Unknown 
BM morphology  
    Normal 
    MH/AA 20 
        MH 12 
        AA 
    Myelodysplasia 18 
        RT 
        RARS 
        RCUD 
        RCMD 
        RAEB-1 
        RAEB-2 
        MDS-U 
    AML 11 
Karyotype  
    Abnormal 29 
    Normal 24 
    Mitosis failure 

RT indicates refractory thrombocytopenia; RARS, refractory anemia with ringed sideroblasts; RCUD, refractory cytopenia with unilineage dysplasia; RCMD, refractory cytopenia with multilineage dysplasia; RAEB, refractory anemia with excess of blast; RAEB-1, 5%–9% blasts; RAEB-2, 10%–19% blasts; and MDS-U, MDS-unclassifiable, according to the World Health Organization classification 2008.

*

Consanguinity was defined according to the familial history and/or homozygous FANC gene mutation or deletion (when known); frequent homozygosity regions were found in the fibroblasts of these patients when tested by SNP-array (n = 11).

A moderate dyserythropoiesis is usual in bone marrow of FA patients and was not considered as a criteria for MDS.

At inclusion in the study.

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