Healthy bone marrow is replaced by fibrosis, resulting in a lack of production of normal cells
Aetiology
- Median age of diagnosis ~65 but can affect younger patients
- Underlying cause is unknown
- There is an association with mutations of the JAK2, CALR, or MPL gene
Clinical presentation
- Marrow failure - variable degrees
- Anaemia, bleeding, infection
- Bone marrow fibrosis with no alternative cause
- Extramedullary hematopoiesis (liver and spleen)
- Splenomegaly can cause LUQ abdominal pain, complications include portal hypertension
- Catabolism - night sweats, extreme weight loss
Investigations
Bloods
- Leukoerythroblastic film appearances
- Teardrop-shaped RBCs in peripheral blood
Bone marrow
- Fibrosis on trephine biopsy
Genetic testing
- JAK2, CALR, MLP mutations
- Approx 10% ‘triple negative’
Management
- Supportive - blood transfusion, platelets, antibiotics
- Allogenic stem cell transplantation in a select few
- Splenectomy (CONTROVERSIAL)
- JAK2 inhibitors e.g. ruxolitinib