Polycythemia vera: stem-cell and probable clonal origin of the disease

JW Adamson, PJ Fialkow, S Murphy… - … England Journal of …, 1976 - Mass Medical Soc
JW Adamson, PJ Fialkow, S Murphy, JF Prchal, L Steinmann
New England Journal of Medicine, 1976Mass Medical Soc
Two women with polycythemia vera and heterozygosity (G d B/G d A) at the X-
chromosomelinked locus for glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase were studied to
determine the nature of the cellular origin of their polycythemia. In contrast to unaffected
tissue, such as skin fibroblasts, which consisted of both B and A types, the glucose-6-
phosphate dehydrogenase of the patients' erythrocytes, granulocytes and platelets was only
of Type A. These results provide direct evidence for the stem-cell nature of polycythemia …
Abstract
Two women with polycythemia vera and heterozygosity (Gd B/Gd A) at the X-chromosomelinked locus for glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase were studied to determine the nature of the cellular origin of their polycythemia. In contrast to unaffected tissue, such as skin fibroblasts, which consisted of both B and A types, the glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase of the patients' erythrocytes, granulocytes and platelets was only of Type A. These results provide direct evidence for the stem-cell nature of polycythemia vera and strongly imply a clonal origin for this disease. The fact that no descendants of the presumed normal stem cells were found in circulation suggests that bone-marrow proliferation in this disorder is influenced by local (intramarrow) regulatory factors. (N Engl J Med 295:913–916, 1976)
The New England Journal Of Medicine