Table 1.

The WHO criteria for the diagnosis of PV


A1  

Elevated RCM (> 25% more than mean normal predicted value, or Hb more than 185 g/L in men, 165 g/L in women*)  
A2   No cause of secondary erythrocytosis, including:  
  Absence of familial erythrocytosis  
  No elevation of Epo due to:  
  Hypoxia (arterial pO2 ≤ 92%)  
  High oxygen affinity hemoglobin  
  Truncated Epo receptor  
  Inappropriate Epo production by tumor  
A3   Splenomegaly  
A4   Clonal genetic abnormality other than Ph chromosome or BCR/ABL fusion gene in marrow cells  
A5   Endogenous erythroid colony formation in vitro  
B1   Thrombocytosis more than 400 × 109/L  
B2   WBC more than 12 × 109/L  
B3   Bone marrow biopsy showing panmyelosis with prominent erythroid and megakaryocytic proliferation  
B4
 
Low serum Epo levels
 

A1  

Elevated RCM (> 25% more than mean normal predicted value, or Hb more than 185 g/L in men, 165 g/L in women*)  
A2   No cause of secondary erythrocytosis, including:  
  Absence of familial erythrocytosis  
  No elevation of Epo due to:  
  Hypoxia (arterial pO2 ≤ 92%)  
  High oxygen affinity hemoglobin  
  Truncated Epo receptor  
  Inappropriate Epo production by tumor  
A3   Splenomegaly  
A4   Clonal genetic abnormality other than Ph chromosome or BCR/ABL fusion gene in marrow cells  
A5   Endogenous erythroid colony formation in vitro  
B1   Thrombocytosis more than 400 × 109/L  
B2   WBC more than 12 × 109/L  
B3   Bone marrow biopsy showing panmyelosis with prominent erythroid and megakaryocytic proliferation  
B4
 
Low serum Epo levels
 

A positive diagnosis of PV is made when A1 and A2 as well as any other criterion from category A is present or when A1 and A2 as well as any 2 criteria of category B are present.

RCM indicates red cell mass; WBC, white blood cell count.

*

Or more than 99th percentile of method-specific reference range for age, sex, and altitude of residence.

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