scholarly journals Refined chromosome analysis as an independent prognostic indicator in de novo myelodysplastic syndromes

Blood ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 67 (6) ◽  
pp. 1721-1730
Author(s):  
JJ Yunis ◽  
RE Rydell ◽  
MM Oken ◽  
MA Arnesen ◽  
MG Mayer ◽  
...  

In a study of 56 consecutive adult patients with de novo myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), all cases were successfully analyzed with two refined chromosome banding techniques. Most patients (44 of 56, 79%) were found to have a chromosome defect. The majority of these patients had a recurrent loss of chromosomal material rather than a reciprocal translocation or inversion, as commonly found in acute leukemia. The three largest chromosomal categories found were associated with a wide range of survival. Twelve patients (21%) had normal chromosomes, a stable clinical course, and long survival (median follow-up time of 49 months, with all patients alive). Nine patients had in common a single chromosome defect resulting in either monosomy 7 or deletion 7q. They had a median survival of 12 months, and four died of acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL). Of 12 patients with complex defects, 11 had a complete or partial loss of a chromosome 5 and a complete or partial loss of the long arm of a chromosome 7 or 20. They had a poor median survival of four months, and six patients died of ANLL. Although the French-American-British (FAB) classification was also found to have some prognostic value, FAB subgroups were chromosomally heterogeneous and showed less dramatic differences in median survival than the larger chromosomal subgroups. We have shown, for the first time, that a refined chromosomal analysis is an independent prognostic indicator in de novo MDS and may be helpful in establishing therapeutic approaches in this difficult group of heterogeneous disorders.

Blood ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 67 (6) ◽  
pp. 1721-1730 ◽  
Author(s):  
JJ Yunis ◽  
RE Rydell ◽  
MM Oken ◽  
MA Arnesen ◽  
MG Mayer ◽  
...  

Abstract In a study of 56 consecutive adult patients with de novo myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), all cases were successfully analyzed with two refined chromosome banding techniques. Most patients (44 of 56, 79%) were found to have a chromosome defect. The majority of these patients had a recurrent loss of chromosomal material rather than a reciprocal translocation or inversion, as commonly found in acute leukemia. The three largest chromosomal categories found were associated with a wide range of survival. Twelve patients (21%) had normal chromosomes, a stable clinical course, and long survival (median follow-up time of 49 months, with all patients alive). Nine patients had in common a single chromosome defect resulting in either monosomy 7 or deletion 7q. They had a median survival of 12 months, and four died of acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL). Of 12 patients with complex defects, 11 had a complete or partial loss of a chromosome 5 and a complete or partial loss of the long arm of a chromosome 7 or 20. They had a poor median survival of four months, and six patients died of ANLL. Although the French-American-British (FAB) classification was also found to have some prognostic value, FAB subgroups were chromosomally heterogeneous and showed less dramatic differences in median survival than the larger chromosomal subgroups. We have shown, for the first time, that a refined chromosomal analysis is an independent prognostic indicator in de novo MDS and may be helpful in establishing therapeutic approaches in this difficult group of heterogeneous disorders.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 3795-3795
Author(s):  
Animesh Pardanani ◽  
Christy Finke ◽  
Terra L Lasho ◽  
Aref Al-Kali ◽  
Kebede Begna ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3795 Recent studies suggest a powerful prognostic value for plasma cytokine levels in primary myelofibrosis (IL-2R, IL-8, IL-12, IL-15 and CXCL10) and large cell lymphoma (IL-2R, IL-8, IL-10, IL-12, CXCL9 and CXCL10). In order to examine the possibility of a similar phenomenon in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), we used multiplex ELISA to measure 30 plasma cytokines in 78 patients with primary MDS. Compared to normal controls (n =35), the levels of 19 cytokines were significantly altered. Multivariable analysis identified increased levels of CXCL10 (p<0.01), IL-7 (p=0.02) and IL-6 (p=0.07) as predictors of shortened survival; the survival association remained significant when the Cox model was adjusted for the international prognostic scoring system (IPSS), age, transfusion-need or thrombocytopenia. MDS patients with normal plasma levels of CXCL10, IL-7 and IL-6 lived significantly longer (median survival 76 months) than those with elevated levels of at least one of the three cytokines (median survival 25 months) (p<0.01). Increased levels of IL-6 were associated with inferior leukemia-free survival, independent of other prognostic factors (p=0.01). Comparison of plasma cytokines between MDS (n =78) and primary myelofibrosis (n =127) revealed a significantly different pattern of abnormalities. These observations reinforce the concept of distinct and prognostically-relevant plasma cytokine signatures in hematologic malignancies.Figure:Survival data for 78 patients with de novo myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) stratified based on plasma levels of CXCL10, IL-7 and IL-6: (i) normal levels of all 3 cytokines (top curve), or (ii) increased (> 3 standard deviations of the normal mean level) level(s) of one or more of the aforementioned cytokines (bottom curve) (p=0.002).Figure:. Survival data for 78 patients with de novo myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) stratified based on plasma levels of CXCL10, IL-7 and IL-6: (i) normal levels of all 3 cytokines (top curve), or (ii) increased (> 3 standard deviations of the normal mean level) level(s) of one or more of the aforementioned cytokines (bottom curve) (p=0.002). Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 2882-2882
Author(s):  
Naseema Gangat ◽  
Terra L. Lasho ◽  
Mrinal M Patnaik ◽  
Christy Finke ◽  
Mark R Litzow ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Addition of sex combs-like 1 (ASXL1) is frequently mutated (mutational frequency 14-29%) and is prognostically relevant in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) (Bejar, NEJM 2011, Thol, JCO 2011). The prevalence and prognostic impact of ASXL1 mutation in MDS with ring sideroblasts (MDS-RS) is not known. MDS-RS is defined by the presence of ≥15% RS in bone marrow (BM), with refractory anemia with ring sideroblasts (RARS) being the prototype but may also be seen in other categories. Methods : Our institutional database was reviewed to identify patients with WHO-defined primary MDS with ≥1% BM RS. Pathology slides, including iron stains, were reviewed to accurately quantify BM RS percentage and confirm WHO morphologic categories. All patients were annotated for their mutational status including ASXL1, JAK2, MPL and IDH with a subset for SF3B1 by PCR sequencing performed on BM specimens obtained at diagnosis. Results : i) Patient characteristics: A total of 76 MDS patients displayed ≥1% BM RS (median age 72 years; 76% males); 51 (67%) patients had ≥15% BM RS. IPSS-R risk categories for the entire 76 study patients were 30% very low, 37% low, 14% intermediate, 11% high and 8% very high; IPSS-R karyotype was normal in 63%, very good/good risk 17%, intermediate risk 12%, and poor/very poor in 8%; 3% had monosomal karyotype. ii) Prevalence of ASXL1 mutations: Twenty-one (28%) of the 76 study patients were ASXL1 mutated; ASXL1 mutational frequencies were 25% (16/63 patients) in the absence and 38% (5/13 patients) in the presence of excess blasts (P =0.34). When considering only those patients with ≥15% BM RS (n =51), ASXL1 mutations were detected in 12 (24%) patients with mutational frequencies of 24% (11/46 patients) in the absence and 20% (1/5 patients) in the presence of excess blasts (P =0.84); ASXL1 mutational frequencies were 13% (3/23 patients) in RARS and 37% (7/19 patients) in RCMD-RS (P=0.07). In terms of other mutations, all 76 study patients were wild-type for JAK2 and MPL, whereas IDH2 R140Q mutations were present in 4 (5%) patients, including 3 with concomitant ASXL1 and IDH2 mutations. IDH1 mutation was seen in only 1 patient. 25 of 43 (58%) patients screened were mutated for SF3B1, including 4 (9%) who were mutated for both ASXL1 and SF3B1. Significant associations were evident between ASXL1 and IDH2 mutations (P =0.02) but not between ASXL1 and SF3B1 mutations (P =0.61). iii) Clinical correlates of ASXL1 mutations: Among all 76 study patients, presence of ASXL1 mutation did not correlate with age (P =0.30), hemoglobin level (P =0.17), platelet count (P =0.53), BM blast percentage (P =0.17), WHO morphologic category (P =0.34), transfusion dependence (P =0.84), IPSS-R cytogenetic categories (P =0.93), or IPSS-R risk group (P =0.33). The results were unchanged when analyzing the 51 patients with MDS-RS (i.e. ≥15% BM RS). Amongst the ASXL1 mutated patients (n =21) IPSS-R cytogenetic categories were as follows: 13 patients with normal karyotype (62%), 2 patients with trisomy 8 (10%), 1 patient each with -Y, del(11q), del(5q), del(20q), isochromosome 17 and monosomy 7 (5% each). iv) Prognostic impact of ASXL1 mutations: Median follow-up was 42.5 months, during which time 69 (91%) deaths and 8 (11%) leukemic transformations were documented. ASXL1 mutated patients had a median survival of 29 months, compared to 45 months in ASXL1 wild-type patients (P =0.04). However, the difference in median survival was no longer significant during multivariable analysis, which instead identified only IPSS-R and transfusion need as being independent predictors of inferior survival. Amongst those patients without excess blasts (n =63), presence of ASXL1 mutation predicted inferior survival in univariate analysis (P =.04) and significance was sustained during multivariable analysis that included IPSS-R cytogenetic categories (P =.04) but became borderline when WHO morphologic category was included (P =0.06); ASXL1 mutated patients had a shortened median survival of 43 months compared to 66 months in ASXL1 wild-type patients (P =.04). In the presence of ≥15% BM RS, ASXL1 mutations did not affect survival (P =0.48); the results were the same for RARS (P =0.9) and RCMD-RS (P =0.64). Conclusions : ASXL1 mutations might not affect survival in MDS patients with ≥15% BM RS, including those with RARS or RCMD-RS. Furthermore, an apparent survival disadvantage seen in ASXL1 -mutated MDS patients with ≥1% BM RS was accounted for by IPSS-R. Disclosures Pardanani: Stemline: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 73 (2) ◽  
pp. 619-622 ◽  
Author(s):  
EC Guinan ◽  
NJ Tarbell ◽  
R Tantravahi ◽  
HJ Weinstein

Abstract Therapeutic options for children with de novo or secondary myelodysplastic syndromes (MDSs) are limited. We report the outcome of eight pediatric patients (median age 12 years, range 3 to 19 years) with myelodysplasia who underwent allogeneic bone marrow transplantation between 1984 and 1987. Two of the eight children had developed secondary myelodysplasia after alkylating agent-based combination chemotherapy. Five patients had clonal chromosomal abnormalities, including four patients with monosomy 7. Seven of eight patients engrafted. Two of these seven subsequently died of complications of acute or chronic graft-v-host disease (GVHD), and a third patient died at 21 months of pulmonary fibrosis. None of the patients have had recurrence of disease. The four surviving patients remain in complete remission at a median follow-up of 19 months (range 10 to 44 months).


2006 ◽  
Vol 134 (9-10) ◽  
pp. 404-407
Author(s):  
Dragomir Marisavljevic ◽  
Milena Pantic-Ludoski ◽  
Angelina Novak ◽  
Vesna Djordjevic

Introduction: Rearrangements of any single chromosome in human karyotype have been reported in patients with pMDS. Objective: To examine the role of aberrations of chromosome 8 in pathogenesis, clinical presentation and progression of myelodysplastic syndromes. Method: Cytogenetic analysis of bone marrow cells was carried out by direct method and by means of 24- and/or 48-hour unstimulated cell culture. Chromosomes were obtained by modified method of HG-bands. Results: On presentation, 109 out of 271 successfully karyotyped patients (40,2%) had abnormal karyotypes. Among them, 22 patients (10.9%) had aberrations of chromosome 8. Ten patients had trisomy 8 as "simple" aberration whilst additional three cases had trisomy 8 included in "complex" karyotypes (?3 chromosomes). Cases with constitutional trisomy 8 mosaicism (CT8M) were excluded using the chromosome analyses of PHA-stimulated blood cultures. On the contrary, monosomy (seven patients) or deletion of chromosome 8 (two patients) were exclusively found in "complex" karyotypes. During prolonged cytogenetic follow-up, trisomy 8 was not recorded in evolving karyotypes. In contrast, trisomy 8 disappeared in two cases during subsequent cytogenetic studies, i.e. 23 and 72 months from diagnosis, accompanied in one patient with complete hematological remission. No difference regarding age, sex, cytopenia, blood and marrow blast count or response to treatment was found between patients with trisomy 8 as the sole aberration compared to those with normal cytogenetics. Median survival of patients with trisomy 8 as the sole aberration was 27 months, as compared to 32 months in patients with normal cytogenetics (p=0.468), whilst median survival of patients with aberrations of chromosome 8 included in "complex" karyotypes was only 4 months. Conclusion: Aberrations of chromosome 8 are common in patients with pMDS. The presence of a clone with trisomy 8 is not always the sign of disease progression or poor prognosis in MDS patients, in contrast to clones with aberrations of chromosome 8 manifesting the loss of genetic material.


2020 ◽  
Vol 160 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-28
Author(s):  
Maryna A. Vazmitsel ◽  
Vasiliki Grammatopoulou ◽  
Jianhui Yao ◽  
Jacqueline R. Batanian

We report on a novel variant of the dicentric chromosome 17;20 (dic (17;20)(p11.2;q11.2) in a patient with de novo myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). Based on FISH and array-CGH, the variant turns out to be an insertion of chromosome 17 (17p11.2-telomere 17) into chromosome 20 with breakpoints at 20q11.22 and 20q13.33. Based on conventional chromosome analysis and G-banding patterns, the region 17p11.2-17q25 was directly inserted between 20q11.22 and 20q13.33. The breakpoint junctions occurred within KCNJ12 (17p11.2), UQCC1 (20q11.2), and CDH4 (20q13.3), leading to 5′ deletions of all the genes and positioning the 3′ of UQCC1 next to KCNJ12 at 17p11.2 and CDH4 next to an unknown gene at 17q25-20q13.3. In addition, the centromere of chromosome 17 was not active, transforming the primary constriction to a flat band. Therefore, the novel insertion variant is a pseudo dicentric derivative chromosome with one functional centromere: 45,XX,der(17;20)del(20)(q11.22q13.33)ins(20;17)(q11.2;p11.2q25). A review of the literature of all dic(17;20) cases is presented. For the first time, we report an array-CGH characterization of such rare variant that revealed to be an insertion.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 4636-4636
Author(s):  
Meritxell Nomdedeu ◽  
Xavier Calvo ◽  
Arturo Pereira ◽  
Dolors Costa ◽  
Carmen Pedro ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Therapy-related Myelodysplastic Syndromes (t-MDS) are those MDS occurring after cytotoxic and/or radiation therapy administered for a prior neoplastic or non-neoplastic disorder. Their prognosis is generally very poor. The commonly used risk prognostic models for MDS (IPSS and IPSS-R) are not validated in this entity as they were developed after the exclusion of therapy-related cases (Greenberg et al. Blood 1997; Greenberg et al. Blood 2012). Aims The main aims of this study are: a) to report clinical findings and overall survival on 233 patients with t-MDS, and to compare them with a large series of de novo cases; b) to test if IPSS-R is applicable to t-MDS patients. Patients and methods The study is based on the Spanish Registry for MDS, a retrospective database that includes more than 10000 cases. The investigators were asked to fill in a questionnaire regarding prior disease (PD) and prior therapy in those cases reported to be t-MDS. Herein are described the clinical features and overall survival of the first 233 cases with the required information, and compared with patients with de novo MDS from a single center series (n=725). Log Rank test was applied to asses IPSS-R in t-MDS group. Results The 233 reported patients were diagnosed between January 1993 and February 2014. The series includes 104 women (44,6%) and 129 men (55,4%). One hundred and two patients (43.9%) had a primary hematologic malignancy, 119 (51%) had a solid tumor, and 12 (5.1%) received cytotoxic therapy for autoimmune disorders. Ninety eight patients (42.6%) received only chemotherapy (CT), 45 (19.6%) received only radiotherapy (RT), 44 (19.1%) received combined modality treatment (CMT), and 43 (18.6%) received an autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT). The median time of latency between PD and diagnosis in t-MDS group was 4.56 years (range: 0.03-29.63) in patients previously treated with CT or CMT, significantly lower than the observed after RT (8.54; range 0.83-23.02) or ASCT (8.64; range 2.87-28.32) groups (p=0.023 and p<0.0001, respectively). Median age, hemoglobin concentration, platelet count and absolute neutrophil count at diagnosis were significantly lower in t-MDS compared with de novo MDS, while bone marrow blast cell count was significantly higher. A higher proportion of high risk karyotypes (intermediate, poor and very poor categories of R-IPSS for cytogenetics) in t-MDS than in de novo MDS was observed (45.5% versus 25.6% respectively, p<0.0001). Within t-MDS cases, those patients who had received CT, CMT or ASCT also presented a higher proportion of high risk karyotypes compared with t-MDS after RT (52.1 vs 24.1% respectively, p=0.006). There was a significantly shorter median overall survival in patients treated with CT/CMT or ASCT in comparison with de novo patients or t-MDS patients treated with RT (14.88 versus 25.06 versus 47.18 months, respectively (log rank test < 0, 0001). In contrast, no difference between de novo and t-MDS after RT was found (median survival 53.6 months vs. 47.17 months, respectively, n.s). These findings are in concordance with previously published data (Nardi et al, JCO 2012) suggesting that some t-MDS after RT may not be truly t-MDS, but just coincidental. The IPSS-R prognostic score could separate t-MDS patients into five risk groups in terms of overall survival, with a median survival of 76.68 months, 38.73 months, 16.59 months, 13.3 months and 6.37 months, respectively (p<0.0001; Figure 1). A shorter overall survival for each category was found in t-MDS in comparison with de novo MDS, reaching statistical significance in the intermediate and high risk category and showing a trend towards significance in the very low and low risk categories (Figure 2). Conclusions In conclusion, our data supports the notion that t-MDS may contain entities with heterogeneous prognosis due to a diverse biological basis. The capacity of the IPSS-R for separating good prognostic from bad prognostic cases shown in this study could be very useful in the clinical setting in order to offer risk-adapted treatments to patients, although the development of a specific prognostic score for these entities would be needed. <![if !vml]><![endif]> Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 73 (2) ◽  
pp. 619-622
Author(s):  
EC Guinan ◽  
NJ Tarbell ◽  
R Tantravahi ◽  
HJ Weinstein

Therapeutic options for children with de novo or secondary myelodysplastic syndromes (MDSs) are limited. We report the outcome of eight pediatric patients (median age 12 years, range 3 to 19 years) with myelodysplasia who underwent allogeneic bone marrow transplantation between 1984 and 1987. Two of the eight children had developed secondary myelodysplasia after alkylating agent-based combination chemotherapy. Five patients had clonal chromosomal abnormalities, including four patients with monosomy 7. Seven of eight patients engrafted. Two of these seven subsequently died of complications of acute or chronic graft-v-host disease (GVHD), and a third patient died at 21 months of pulmonary fibrosis. None of the patients have had recurrence of disease. The four surviving patients remain in complete remission at a median follow-up of 19 months (range 10 to 44 months).


Author(s):  
А.Р. Зарипова ◽  
Л.Р. Нургалиева ◽  
А.В. Тюрин ◽  
И.Р. Минниахметов ◽  
Р.И. Хусаинова

Проведено исследование гена интерферон индуцированного трансмембранного белка 5 (IFITM5) у 99 пациентов с несовершенным остеогенезом (НО) из 86 неродственных семей. НО - клинически и генетически гетерогенное наследственное заболевание соединительной ткани, основное клиническое проявление которого - множественные переломы, начиная с неонатального периода жизни, зачастую приводящие к инвалидизации с детского возраста. К основным клиническим признакам НО относятся голубые склеры, потеря слуха, аномалия дентина, повышенная ломкость костей, нарушения роста и осанки с развитием характерных инвалидизирующих деформаций костей и сопутствующих проблем, включающих дыхательные, неврологические, сердечные, почечные нарушения. НО встречается как у мужчин, так и у женщин. До сих пор не определена степень генетической гетерогенности заболевания. На сегодняшний день известно 20 генов, вовлеченных в патогенез НО, и исследователи разных стран продолжают искать новые гены. В последнее десятилетие стало известно, что аутосомно-рецессивные, аутосомно-доминантные и Х-сцепленные мутации в широком спектре генов, кодирующих белки, которые участвуют в синтезе коллагена I типа, его процессинге, секреции и посттрансляционной модификации, а также в белках, которые регулируют дифференцировку и активность костеобразующих клеток, вызывают НО. Мутации в гене IFITM5, также называемом BRIL (bone-restricted IFITM-like protein), участвующем в формировании остеобластов, приводят к развитию НО типа V. До 5% пациентов имеют НО типа V, который характеризуется образованием гиперпластического каллуса после переломов, кальцификацией межкостной мембраны предплечья и сетчатым рисунком ламелирования, наблюдаемого при гистологическом исследовании кости. В 2012 г. гетерозиготная мутация (c.-14C> T) в 5’-нетранслируемой области (UTR) гена IFITM5 была идентифицирована как основная причина НО V типа. В представленной работе проведен анализ гена IFITM5 и идентифицирована мутация c.-14C>T, возникшая de novo, у одного пациента с НО, которому впоследствии был установлен V тип заболевания. Также выявлены три известных полиморфных варианта: rs57285449; c.80G>C (p.Gly27Ala) и rs2293745; c.187-45C>T и rs755971385 c.279G>A (p.Thr93=) и один ранее не описанный вариант: c.128G>A (p.Ser43Asn) AGC>AAC (S/D), которые не являются патогенными. В статье уделяется внимание особенностям клинических проявлений НО V типа и рекомендуется определение мутации c.-14C>T в гене IFITM5 при подозрении на данную форму заболевания. A study was made of interferon-induced transmembrane protein 5 gene (IFITM5) in 99 patients with osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) from 86 unrelated families and a search for pathogenic gene variants involved in the formation of the disease phenotype. OI is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous hereditary disease of the connective tissue, the main clinical manifestation of which is multiple fractures, starting from the natal period of life, often leading to disability from childhood. The main clinical signs of OI include blue sclera, hearing loss, anomaly of dentin, increased fragility of bones, impaired growth and posture, with the development of characteristic disabling bone deformities and associated problems, including respiratory, neurological, cardiac, and renal disorders. OI occurs in both men and women. The degree of genetic heterogeneity of the disease has not yet been determined. To date, 20 genes are known to be involved in the pathogenesis of OI, and researchers from different countries continue to search for new genes. In the last decade, it has become known that autosomal recessive, autosomal dominant and X-linked mutations in a wide range of genes encoding proteins that are involved in the synthesis of type I collagen, its processing, secretion and post-translational modification, as well as in proteins that regulate the differentiation and activity of bone-forming cells cause OI. Mutations in the IFITM5 gene, also called BRIL (bone-restricted IFITM-like protein), involved in the formation of osteoblasts, lead to the development of OI type V. Up to 5% of patients have OI type V, which is characterized by the formation of a hyperplastic callus after fractures, calcification of the interosseous membrane of the forearm, and a mesh lamellar pattern observed during histological examination of the bone. In 2012, a heterozygous mutation (c.-14C> T) in the 5’-untranslated region (UTR) of the IFITM5 gene was identified as the main cause of OI type V. In the present work, the IFITM5 gene was analyzed and the de novo c.-14C> T mutation was identified in one patient with OI who was subsequently diagnosed with type V of the disease. Three known polymorphic variants were also identified: rs57285449; c.80G> C (p.Gly27Ala) and rs2293745; c.187-45C> T and rs755971385 c.279G> A (p.Thr93 =) and one previously undescribed variant: c.128G> A (p.Ser43Asn) AGC> AAC (S / D), which were not pathogenic. The article focuses on the features of the clinical manifestations of OI type V, and it is recommended to determine the c.-14C> T mutation in the IFITM5 gene if this form of the disease is suspected.


2020 ◽  
pp. 63-72
Author(s):  
Yu. Olefir ◽  
E. Sakanyan ◽  
I. Osipova ◽  
V. Dobrynin ◽  
M. Smirnova ◽  
...  

The entry of a wide range of biotechnological products into the pharmaceutical market calls for rein-forcement of the quality, efficacy and safety standards at the state level. The following general monographs have been elaborated for the first time to be included into the State Pharmacopoeia of the Russian Federation, XIV edition: "Viral safety" and "Reduction of the risk of transmitting animal spongiform encephalopathy via medicinal products". These general monographs were elaborated taking into account the requirements of foreign pharmacopoeias and the WHO recommendations. The present paper summarises the key aspects of the monographs.


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