← Return to Essential Thrombocythemia: Looking for information and support

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@bonnieshaffer

Hi there,

Yes, this diagnosis does seem to be extremely rare! I don't qualify for RARS-T because I don't have 20% ringed sideroblasts (I thought the cut off was 15%) according to my Oncologist.

My Oncologist basically said I will need a bone marrow transplant in 5 years due to my age (61).

I told him I don't think I want to go through that and he said we could revisit later on.

He couldn't really give me a prognosis due to the fact that there is not really a cohort of people large enough to study.

My mutations are: SF3B1, DNMT3A, TET2, CUX1 and JAK2.

I'm certainly glad to meet you and know you are there!

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Replies to "Hi there, Yes, this diagnosis does seem to be extremely rare! I don't qualify for RARS-T..."

I told my Oncologist that I would not go through a stem cell transplant after 80. I’m almost 77. He said we’ll discuss this when and if your MDS/MPN-RS-T mutates or no longer responds to the normal meds to treat this disorder. Sloan has the RS number at 15%. So, do you experience fatigue during the day? I need a 30 minute nap every day. I also have Chronic Sensorimotor Axonal Polyneuropathy, CMT2 and CMT4B. The Sensorimotor Axonal Polyneuropathy is an acquired disease while the CMT disorders are hereditary. My mothers family has a six generation history of this disorder. CMT comes down on the X chromosome. No one ever had a genetics test done in the past because whole Exome Sequencing wasn’t around. I went with my three daughters to Weill Cornell in Manhattan to undergo genetic testing. Results indicated one daughter had no mutations. Daughter 2 had the CMT2 mutation. Daughter 3 has both the CMT2and CMT4B mutations. So this sucker that has plagued my mother’s family continues to plague my family.
Glad to finally hook up with someone with a similar case if MDS/MPN. Our mutations aren’t the same but I assume our symptoms may be close.