Abstract
A woman with Philadelphia chromosome-positive c-ALL with +8 and i17q in addition underwent an unpurged blood stem cell autograft after 200mg/m2 melphalan in first relapse. Maintenance therapy with 6-mercatopurine was started following the autograft. Moderate pancytopenia developed after 4 months, and myelodysplasia (refractory anemia) was diagnosed which rapidly evolved into AML. The cytogenetic findings remained unchanged. She also developed CNS disease, but the blasts in the cerebrospinal fluid were lymphoid in character on immunophenotyping. She then received palliative treatment until death. The remarkable features here are the evolution into myelodysplasia and AML with retention of the original complex karyotype, and subsequent coexistence of lymphoid disease in the CNS and myeloid disease systemically. It is possible that the lineage switch and development of myelodysplasia in this case may have been secondary to treatment, but persistence of the original cytogenetic clone makes this unlikely. This may have been the result of some unusual effect of the treatment on the original clone, or expansion of a small unidentified myeloid clone present originally which gained a proliferative advantage due to the ALL-type treatment. This case confirms the aggressive and polymorphic nature of Ph+ ALL which may be the result of origin from an early progenitor cell (stem cell disease).