Remark
1) Why was this study conducted? |
To describe the characteristic alterations of megaloblastic anemia found by flow cytometry in bone marrow, after finding no related information on this topic in the literature. |
2) What were the most relevant results of the study? |
The results of the study describe a characteristic pattern of alterations (arrest in maturation associated with an increased relation in FSC/SSC ratio) in bone marrow precursors of patients with megaloblastic anemia, mainly affecting erythroblast series. |
3) What do these results contribute? |
These results allow for diagnosis of this disorder even before the plasma levels of vitamin B12 have been determined and therefore guide treatment, especially in centers where the accessibility to this laboratory parameter is not permanent. |
Introduction
Megaloblastic anemia corresponds to a group of pathologies produced by defective synthesis of nuclear DNA due to deficiency of vitamin B12 or folic acid 1,2. The clinical manifestations are systemic, being able to be hematological, neurological and psychiatric. The diagnosis is usually clinical, supported by general exams such as the hemogram, indirect evidence of ineffective hematopoiesis in the biochemical profile (elevation of LDH and indirect bilirubin), associated with low plasma levels of vitamin B12 and the elevation of metabolites such as methylmalonic acid and homocysteine 2-4.
The study of the bone marrow in patients with megaloblastic anemia is not routine and is performed in cases where other causes of bone marrow failure must be ruled out, such as malignant hematologic diseases. The morphological findings include hypercellular bone marrow, with an increase in the size of the hematopoietic precursors due to asynchrony in maturation between the nucleus and cytoplasm. These characteristics must be interpreted cautiously due to overlapping with those observed in other pathologies such as myelodysplastic syndromes 5.
Flow cytometry is a complementary diagnostic tool that can describe the maturation of myeloid progenitors and is often used in the initial diagnostic approach of the patient with bone marrow failure.
The present report aims to describe the maturational alterations in the hematopoietic cells of the bone marrow observed with flow cytometry in patients with megaloblastic anemia presented at diagnosis with intense cytopenias.
Material and Methods
A retrospective observational study was conducted. Data from the flow cytometry laboratory of the Regional Hospital of Concepción contained in the FileMaker software was obtained from cases of patients referred for cytopenic study and ultimately diagnosed with megaloblastic anemia. For these purposes, the words "anemia" and "megaloblastic" were used in samples sent between January 2015 and December 2018. Megaloblastic anemia was defined as anemia associated with one or more cytopenia in the presence of reduced plasma levels of vitamin B12.
The bone marrow samples from each patient were collected in tubes conditioned with anticoagulant (EDTA) and processed before 48 hours, according to the usual surface labeling protocol (stain-lyse-wash). For immunophenotype, two 8-color tubes panel were used, which included fluorescences (V450, V500, FITC, PE, PerCP-Cy5.5, PE-Cy7, APC and APC-H7), with markers of immature hematopoietic precursor (HLA-DR, CD45, CD34 and CD117), associated with markers of differentiation into neutrophil (CD16, CD13, CD11b, CD10) and/or erythroblast (CD36, CD105, CD71) 6, the proportion of CD36+ CD71+ without expression of CD13 and CD33 was considered to measure the erythroid differentiation of CD34+ cells. In the neutrophil and erythroblast series, immunophenotypic classification of maturation stages was performed according to the acquisition patterns of the previously marked antigens, as published by other authors 7-9. The heterogeneity in CD36 and CD71 expression in erythroblasts was evaluated by measuring the negative proportion to both markers in the erythroid population in the dot/plot between them once platelets (CD45- CD36 + CD71-) were excluded. Physical parameters were estimated by taking a ratio between the complexity peak channel (side scatter, SSC) and cell size (forward scatter, FSC) of neutrophils and erythroblasts about a similar parameter of the total lymphocyte population.
The acquisition was carried out on FACSCantoII® cytometer using DIVA software (BD Biosciences, San José, California). The analysis of the cytometry was carried out by Infinicyt® software (Cytognos, Salamanca, Spain). The institutional ethics committee approved the study.
Statistical analysis
Categorical data were presented as median, n and percentages and numerical data as median and range. The Ji 2 test was used to analyze differences between categorical variables and the Kruskal-Wallis test for numerical ones. Statistical analysis was performed with SPSS statistical software, considering a p <0.05 to be significant.
Results
Eight patients with megaloblastic anemia were identified, and samples from patients diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome (n= 9) and normal/reactive bone marrow or bone marrow unaffected by myeloid pathology (n= 10) were used as controls. In the total series, 12/27 (44%) were male, and 15/27 (36%) were female, with a median age of 58 years (19-81). The other characteristics of patients with megaloblastic anemia are shown in Table 1.
Clinical parameter | Mean |
---|---|
Age, years (range) | 61 (40-81) |
Male, (n) | 5 |
Laboratory Parameter | |
White blood cells, cells/mm3 (range) | 2,680 (1,120-6,970) |
Hemoglobin, g/dL (rango) | 6.1 (4.6-7.9) |
Hematocrit, % (rango) | 17.6 (14.0-22.0) |
Platelets, cells/mm3 (rango) | 92,000 (21,000-155,000) |
MCV, fL (rango) | 113 (99-125) |
LDH, U/L (rango) | 2,819 (996-4,568) |
Erythroblasts in bone marrow, % | 39 (9-54) |
MCV: mean corpuscular volume, LDH: lactodehydrogenase;
The reference diagnoses in the myelodysplastic syndrome group were refractory cytopenia with multilineage dysplasia (n= 4), refractory anemia with excess of blasts (n = 4) and unclassified myelodysplastic syndrome (n= 1) and in normal bone marrow non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (n= 2), Hodgkin's lymphoma (n= 2), and reactive bone marrow (n= 6). The results of the immunophenotypic analysis are shown in Table 2. The proportion of immature hematopoietic cells (CD34+ and CD34-/CD117+) was similar among the three groups. In megaloblastic anemia, a higher proportion of CD34+ cells without CD13 expression than that of normal bone marrow and myelodysplastic syndromes was observed (58% vs. 50% and 29%, p= 0.03), which was associated with a higher differentiation of CD34+ cells to the erythroid line than to normal bone marrow and myelodysplastic syndromes (29% vs. 16% and 14%, p <0.005), a finding that was not observed in CD34-/CD117+ progenitors.
Parameter | MA (n= 8) | NRBM (n= 10) | MDS (n= 9) |
---|---|---|---|
Immature myeloid cells | |||
%CD34+ cells (total) | 1.8 | 1.1 | 3.7 |
%CD34+CD13- | 58 | 50 | 29 |
%CD34+ CD36+CD71+ | 29* | 16 | 14 |
%CD34-CD117+ (total) | 4 | 1.2** | 3.1 |
%CD34-CD117+ CD13- | 45 | 29 | 37 |
Neutrophil precursors | |||
% neutrophils (total) | 35 | 68** | 43 |
% Stage I | 10 | 1.3 | 2.8 |
% Stage II | 26 | 13** | 35 |
% Stage I + II | 35 | 14** | 40 |
Erythroblasts precursors | |||
% erythroblast (total) | 35 | 68** | 43 |
% CD105+ precursors | 69** | 19 | 23 |
% CD36-CD71- erythroblasts | 23 | 3.3** | 25 |
Physical parameters | |||
FSC-A erythroid/lymphocyte | 0.8 | 0.7 | 0.7 |
SSC-A erythroid/lymphocyte | 1.0* | 0.5 | 0.5 |
FSC-A neutrophil/lymphocyte | 4.7* | 2.4 | 2.4 |
SSC-A neutrophil/lymphocyte | 18.0** | 4.8 | 6.8 |
MA: megaloblastic anemia; NRBM: normal/reactive bone marrow; MDS: myelodysplastic syndrome; FSC-A: forward scatter; SSC-A: side scatter; NS: not statistically significant; * <0.05; ** <0.01.
The neutrophil series was found in less proportion in megaloblastic anemia compared to normal bone marrow and myelodysplastic syndromes (35% vs. 68% and 43%, p <0.001). A maturation arrest was observed, with an increase in stages I and II in megaloblastic anemia and myelodysplastic syndromes compared to normal bone marrow (35% vs. 40% and 14%, p <0.0001).
In megaloblastic anemia, an important expansion of erythroid progenitors was observed with respect to normal bone marrow and myelodysplastic syndromes (29% vs 8% and 16%, p <0.001). Likewise, a higher percentage of CD105+ precursors was evidenced than in normal bone marrow and myelodysplastic syndromes (69% vs 19% and 23%, p <0.001) (Figure 1). The heterogeneity in the expression of CD36 and CD71 was similar to that observed in myelodysplastic syndromes and, in turn, higher with respect to normal bone marrow (23% vs 25% and 3.3%, p <0.001). Physical parameters showed a higher size (FSC) and cellular complexity (SSC) ratio in neutrophil and erythroblast populations compared to similar parameters in lymphocyte populations in megaloblastic anemia compared to myelodysplastic syndromes and normal bone marrow. In one case the resolution of the described phenotypic alterations was documented once vitamin B12 was administered intramuscularly (10,000 IU per day for three days), with nine days of difference between both studies (Figure 2).
Discussion
In the present study, it was observed that patients with megaloblastic anemia and deep cytopenias have a global alteration of the bone marrow, which mainly affects the erythroid series, and is manifested by an expansion of the total population secondary to an accumulation of precursors in the intermediate stages without adequate differentiation. This produces ineffective hematopoiesis, with clinical and laboratory evidence of marrow insufficiency.
The clinical presentation of megaloblastic anemia is variable, and a marrow study is usually not required. In patients with typical clinical and laboratory manifestations, low serum levels of vitamin B12 allow us to confirm the diagnosis. Other tests used are methylmalonic acid and homocysteine levels, with the last being more specific; however, both studies are not available in most centers and can be altered by other factors 3,5,10. Nevertheless, in some cases severe cytopenias appear, forcing us to rule out other causes of marrow failure (i.e. acute leukemias, myelodysplastic syndromes, etc). This requires an invasive study, as in our series 5. Flow cytometry is a complementary diagnostic tool with short-term results in this diagnostic process, especially in cases where morphology is not specific and there is no permanent availability for measuring plasma levels of vitamin B12, as in our center.
The main differential diagnosis by morphology in megaloblastic anemia are myelodysplastic syndromes. Flow cytometry in myelodysplastic syndromes is used as a complementary tool to morphology for diagnosis, however, to our knowledge, no findings have been described to date related to differential diagnosis with megaloblastic anemia 11. In this way, what has been observed in our series (maturation arrest of erythroblasts series associated with an increase of FSC/SSC ratio of erythroblast and neutrophil precursors) can contribute to the differentiation between both disorders.
The limitations of our report include the low number of cases, which reflects the previously mentioned lack of need for marrow study in most cases of megaloblastic anemia suspicion and also does not correspond to the reality of the clinical spectrum of vitamin B12 deficiency ranging from asymptomatic cases to those with myeloid insufficiency and symptoms of other systems. On the other hand, the retrospective and single-center character of the study may not represent the reality of other public hospitals in the country, so it would be interesting to incorporate more centers in future research on this subject.