Hairy-cell leukemia (HCL) is a rare chronic hematologic malignancy, generally presenting with pancytopenia, relative lymphocytosis, monocytopenia, and splenomegaly. Diagnosis is based on typical bone marrow evaluation with the BRAF-V600E mutation being present in almost 100% of cases of classical HCL. Treatment usually involves the use of purine analogues (PA) as first line therapy. Novel targeting therapies have recently been included in the treatment of therapy-naïve HCL such as PA combination with anti-CD20, BRAF inhibitors alone or combined with anti-CD20. In relapse/refractory disease other novel agents were studied as BRAF and MEK inhibitors, Bruton tyrosine kinase or BCL2 inhibitors: all showed encouraging results. Most clinical trials and guidelines do not specify what is the optimal approach for patients with HCL in special situations as elderly population above 80 years old, very young patients below 40 years old, pregnant women, and when leukemia is presented with other comorbidities as active infection or vasculitis. In this current manuscript, we summarized our approach to HCL in the era of novel agents with special emphasis on age and comorbidities.
Levy et al. (Mon,) studied this question.