Authors: Mary A. Williamson Mt(ascp) Phd,L. Michael Snyder Md
No BCR-ABL1 gene rearrangement.
No PDGFRA, PDGFRB, or FGFR1 gene rearrangements.
Evidence of clonality by either cytogenetic or molecular studies, or blast cells are >2% in the peripheral blood or >5% in the bone marrow.
Neoplasms With Eosinophilia and Abnormalities of PDGFRA , PDGFRB, or FGFR2
Involve rearrangement of tyrosine kinase gene. PDGFRA and PDGFRB rearrangements common in CEL; PDGFRB rearrangements can be detected with routine cytogenetic analysis, PDGFRA is typically cryptic and require FISH for detection.
Who Should Be Suspected?
Patients with eosinophilia for longer than 6 months. Presumptive signs and symptoms of organ involvement, especially cardiac or neurologic.
Laboratory Findings
CBC in CEL:
Eosinophilia with mostly mature eosinophils; the WBC count is usually <25,000/μL but may be >90,000, with rare immature forms.
Mild anemia in half the patients; thrombocytopenia in one third of cases; thrombocytosis may also be present.
Increase in dysplastic-appearing or immature eosinophils.
Bone marrow:
Hypercellular marrow with 25–75% of eosinophils and increase in eosinophil precursors; no reticulin fibrosis.
Hyperplasia with increase in abnormal eosinophils and eosinophilic precursors.