Prognostic factors in myelodysplastic syndromes: critical analysis of the impact of age and gender and failure to identify a very‐low‐risk group using standard mortality ratio techniques
We studied the prognostic value of age and gender by survival, and by standard mortality ratio (SMR) analyses, in 203 untreated patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS); 57 refractory anaemia (RA), 23 refractory anaemia with ringed sideroblasts, 41 refractory anaemia with excess blasts (RAEB), 3 RAEB in transformation (RAEB‐T) and 79 chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia (CMML), aged 23–89 years (median 69, M/F 0.5), who were all karyotyped. Median survival was 36 months. Adverse prognostic factors were: high bone‐marrow blast percentage, complex karyotype, low platelet count, age>60 years, low or high WBC count, haemoglobin<10g/dl, male gender. However, the standard mortality ratio (i.e. mortality compared to that of an age‐ and sex‐adjusted population) was not different between male and female patients. Patients<60 had a higher SMR than older patients. Therefore the prognostic values of age and gender for survival in MDS patients may reflect, at least in part, a characteristic of the population. Furthermore, even in low‐risk groups defined by scoring system we were unable to define a subgroup of patients with a mortality similar to that of the normal population, especially in MDS patients aged<60.