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Determination of age-dependent bone marrow normocellularity.

Authors :
Wong, Jerry
Jackson, Ryan
Chen, Lu
Song, Joo
Pillai, Raju
Afkhami, Michelle
Danilova, Olga
Aoun, Patricia
Gaal, Karl K
Kim, Young
Source :
American Journal of Clinical Pathology. Feb2024, Vol. 161 Issue 2, p170-176. 7p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Objectives Determination of bone marrow cellularity is a key part of bone marrow examination because it provides a small window into a patient's current state of hematopoietic well-being. Traditionally, bone marrow cellularity is estimated semiquantitatively through microscopic examination of core biopsy specimens harvested from the iliac crest of the pelvic bone. Bone marrow cellularity is then designated as hypercellular, normocellular, or hypocellular based on the patient's age. This assessment can have significant clinical impact, but the variation in the age-adjusted normocellularity range is not sufficiently characterized because of a lack of study data, especially in older patients (those older than 70 years of age). This study further established the normal range of bone marrow cellularity, particularly in older adults. Methods In this study, 570 benign staging and healthy donor bone marrows from patients 1 year to 93 years of age were analyzed for cellularity. Results Linear regression modeling demonstrates that cellularity in adults declines approximately 3% per decade, including after the seventh decade of life. The 90% reference interval for normocellularity in United States is 30% to 75% for those aged 18 to 90 years. Conclusions The findings revealed a more stable and slower rate of decline in cellularity with age in adults than the widely used linear model of "100% minus the patient age in decades." Normocellularity is better modeled based on age group. In those younger than 20 years of age, normocellularity ranges from 45% to 85% (mean [SD], 65% [20%]), as defined by Friebert et al in 1998. Based on our study finding of a little less than 3% decline per decade of age, the following is our recommendation for normocellularity range: For individuals 20 to 40 years of age, it ranges from 40% to 70% (mean [SD], 55% [15%]); for individuals 40 to 60 years of age, it ranges from 35% to 65% (mean [SD], 50% [15%]); and for individuals older than 60 years of age, it ranges from 30% to 60% (mean [SD], 45% [15%]). Interestingly, those older than 70 years of age do not show a significant decrease from those aged 60 to 69 years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00029173
Volume :
161
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Journal of Clinical Pathology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175621314
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcp/aqad129