Abstract: | One hundred four patients with a diagnosis of polycythemia vera and a variable period of follow-up had one or more cytogenetic investigations. Chromosome abnormalities were found in 13% of untreated patients, in 56% of cases treated with radioactive phosphorus (32P) or cytotoxic drugs, and in 85% of patients in which transformation of the disease had occurred. Nonrandom chromosome abnormalities found before treatment included +8, +9, 13q-, 20q-; their prognostic value is little, as they are often associated with longstanding, stable disease. In contrast, 5q- anomaly and the appearance of subclones in patients with an abnormal karyotype were found to be poor prognostic signs, as they are usually coincidental with evolution of the disease to myelofibrosis or leukemia. Chromosomally two patterns of acute leukemia were observed in polycythemia vera patients. The first type resembles de novo acute leukemia, in that the clinical and cytologic characteristics of the disorder are easily defined by FAB criteria and the chromosome changes compatible with the types usually found in those conditions. In the second type, assignment to a FAB morphologic subgroup was more difficult, myelodysplastic changes were often present, and the karyotype showed complex abnormalities frequently involving chromosomes #5 and #7. All these features suggest the occurrence of secondary leukemia. |