Essential Thrombocythemia


Pictures Essential Thrombocythemia

Peripheral Blood Smear

Bone Marrow Aspirate

Bone Marrow Aspirate, Dry Tap

Bone Marrow Biopsy

Bone Marrow Biopsy, High Power

  • Clonal stem cell disorder characterized by a pronounced megakaryocytic hyperplasia in the bone marrow and a striking peripheral thrombocytosis .

  • Clinical features
    • Middle aged to elderly, although seen in children and young adults
    • no male/female predilection
    • one third are asymptomatic, discovered only by routine PB examination
    • neither splenomegaly nor hepatomegaly
    • recurrent abortions, fetal growth retardation, thought to be due to placental infarcts

  • Diagnostic criteria
    • platelet count > 600 x 10 ^9/L
    • Hgb < 13 g/dl or normal red cell mass
    • Iron in marrow, or no response to iron therapy
    • No Ph1 or evidence of bcr/abl hybrid
    • Collagen fibrosis of marrow
      • Absent
      • Less than 1/3 biopsy without splenomegaly and leukoerythroblastic reaction
    • No demonstrable cause for thrombocytosis

  • Peripheral blood findings
    • leukocytosis generally mild; rarely greater then 30 x 10^9
    • mild eosinophilia/basophilia
    • rbc normal unless concurrent iron deficiency; tear drop forms and normoblasts not a feature.
    • thrombocytosis with giant platelets ; bizarre forms
    • increased MPV
    • circulating megakaryocytes and megakaryocytic fragments

  • Bone marrow findings
    • mild to moderate hypercellularity
    • striking megakaryocytic hyperplasia with clustering and sheets
    • megakaryocytes enlarged and hyperlobated
    • erythroid and myeloid lines not remarkable
    • mild reticulin fibrosis in a minority of cases

  • Most Common Causes of Marrow Infiltration
    • Carcinomatosis
    • Myelofibrosis: primary or secondary
    • Myeloproliferative disorders
    • Lymphoproliferative disorders
    • Lipid storage diseases
    • Infections: TB, fungal

  • Other
    • transformations to acute leukemia less than other myeloproliferative disorders
    • median survival 10-15 years, if complications of thromboembolism and hemorrhage controlled
Return to Hematopathology ; Department of Pathology ; or Tulane University Medical Center .
Students wishing further information may consider the following links .

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by and Robert McLay and John Krause