M Simon, J P Jouet, J J Huart, J L Demory, F Bauters
{"title":"[Essential thrombocythemia. Clinical, biological study and developmental study of 61 cases].","authors":"M Simon, J P Jouet, J J Huart, J L Demory, F Bauters","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The 61 observations of primary thrombocythemia described in this report represent approximately 15% of the cases of polycythemia vera recorded by the authors over the same 18-year period. The group includes 35 females and 26 males, with a mean age of 62. The disease is usually discovered on routine blood tests (half of cases), and more rarely because of hemorrhagic or thrombotic manifestations. Splenomegaly is found in one-third of cases. Platelet count is permanently above 800 X 10(9)/l (mean : 1 500 X 10(9)/l); mild hyperleukocytosis (mean : 16 X 10(9)/l) with predominant neutrophil polynuclears is usual but myelemia is not constant (28% of cases) and always very moderate; red cell parameters are normal in three-fourths of cases, while the remaining patients have anemia, either due to iron depletion or not. Reticulinic myelofibrosis, usually minimal, is found in 40% of cases. Medullary karyotype is always normal, without chromosome Ph1. Platelet functional abnormalities are not constant and do not correlate with the magnitude of thrombocythemia. 51 patients (84%) received myelosuppressive therapy, mainly by busulfan or radioactive phosphorus. Most deaths were due to intercurrent causes and only one patient developed acute leukemia. 71% of patients are alive at five years and subsequent decrease in the actuarial survival curve is very gradual.</p>","PeriodicalId":18005,"journal":{"name":"La semaine des hopitaux : organe fonde par l'Association d'enseignement medical des hopitaux de Paris","volume":"60 17","pages":"1173-9"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1984-04-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"La semaine des hopitaux : organe fonde par l'Association d'enseignement medical des hopitaux de Paris","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The 61 observations of primary thrombocythemia described in this report represent approximately 15% of the cases of polycythemia vera recorded by the authors over the same 18-year period. The group includes 35 females and 26 males, with a mean age of 62. The disease is usually discovered on routine blood tests (half of cases), and more rarely because of hemorrhagic or thrombotic manifestations. Splenomegaly is found in one-third of cases. Platelet count is permanently above 800 X 10(9)/l (mean : 1 500 X 10(9)/l); mild hyperleukocytosis (mean : 16 X 10(9)/l) with predominant neutrophil polynuclears is usual but myelemia is not constant (28% of cases) and always very moderate; red cell parameters are normal in three-fourths of cases, while the remaining patients have anemia, either due to iron depletion or not. Reticulinic myelofibrosis, usually minimal, is found in 40% of cases. Medullary karyotype is always normal, without chromosome Ph1. Platelet functional abnormalities are not constant and do not correlate with the magnitude of thrombocythemia. 51 patients (84%) received myelosuppressive therapy, mainly by busulfan or radioactive phosphorus. Most deaths were due to intercurrent causes and only one patient developed acute leukemia. 71% of patients are alive at five years and subsequent decrease in the actuarial survival curve is very gradual.