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Query: UMLS:C0023467 (
acute myeloid leukemia
)
35,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The aim of the present study was to compare the immunofluorescence technique (IF) with the immunoenzymatic (IE) alkaline phosphatase-antialkaline phosphatase method for the evaluation of the presence of lymphoid antigens (Ag) in 46 cases of
acute myeloid leukemia
(
AML
). The first technique allows detection of Ag expressed on the cytoplasmic membrane of living cells, whilst the second shows the presence of intracytoplasmic Ag on fixed cells. In general, the percentages of lymphoid Ag expression on
AML
cells are relatively low with both IE (15.2%) and IF (17.4%). We found a good correlation between the two methods for CD2 (4/4),
CD7
(4/5), CD20 (1/1) and CD4 (2/2). The Ag CD19, CD21 and CD8 were negative in all cases, both with IE and with IF. CD3 (2 cases) and CD22 (1 case) were only evident with IE. CD10 was seen in 1 case with IF, whilst it was found more frequently with IE. For this reason, demonstration of CD10 with IF is more specific for the classification of acute leukemia.
...
PMID:Incidence of lymphoid markers in acute myeloid leukemia. Alkaline phosphatase-antialkaline phosphatase versus immunofluorescence. 195 Mar 56
The data of detailed studies of immunophenotype of blast cells in 426 patients with acute leukemias are presented. Diagnostic and prognostic significance of different marker expression has been evaluated in groups of patients with ALL and
AML
. Frequency distribution of T1, T2, T3, pre-B, B, common, Ia and null subvariants identified according to immunoclassification of Baryshinkov et al. was studied in 250 children with ALL. These subvariants differed both in duration of disease (p = 0.0015) and in duration of first complete remission (p = 0.0031). The use of monoclonal antibodies of VI-series in 90 patients with ALL allowed to describe an immunophenotype of the subvariants in detail. The mosaic expression of myeloid antigens CD11, CD14, CD15, CDw65 identified by MoAbs VIM-12, VIM-13, VIM-D5 and VIM-2, respectively, on blast cells of patients with
AML
was shown. The expression of CD11 (ICO-GM1) or CD15 (ICO-G2) was prognostically unfavorable in children with
AML
(p = 0.0028). The expression of T-cell markers (E-receptor,
CD7
, reactivity with anti-T-cell serum) on blasts was prognostically favorable in children with
AML
(p = 0.003). So the data of immunophenotyping are of great value for accurate diagnosis and prognosis of acute leukemias.
...
PMID:Clinical significance of standard CD assessment in acute leukemia. 214 17
The prognostic significance of the expression of surface membrane antigens on the blasts of 123 consecutive patients with de novo
acute myeloblastic leukemia
(
AML
) was evaluated. For this purpose, reactivity of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) CLB-ERY3 (antiblood-group H antigen), VIM-D5 (CD15), WT1 (
CD7
), MY7 (CD13), MY9 (CD33), VID-1 (antihuman leukocyte antigen locus DR [anti-HLA DR]), VIM-2 (CDw65L), VIM-13 (CD14), 63D3 (CD14) and anti-TdT with leukemic blast cell populations was prospectively analyzed with respect to the rates of complete remission (CR), continuous complete remission (CCR), and survival. The overall rate of CR was 65%, the 6-year rates of overall CCR and survival were 23% and 13%, respectively (median period of patient observation, 30 months). Of all Abs tested, four (CLB-ERY3, MY7, anti-TdT, and VIM-D5) were found to be of prognostic value. Reactivity of CLB-ERY3, MY7, and anti-TdT was predictive for CR (CLB-ERY3+, 43% v CLB-ERY3-, 73%, P less than .02; MY7+, 59% v MY7-, 91%, P less than .003; TdT+, 28% v TdT-, 71%, P less than .001, respectively) and probability of survival (significantly lower survival rates: CLB-ERY3+, P less than .02; MY7+, P less than .03; and TdT+ cases, P less than .001, respectively). Reactivity of VIM-D5 was significantly associated with a higher probability of CCR (P less than .01). Our results confirm earlier reports on the prognostic significance of expression of CD13 and TdT in
AML
and indicate CLB-ERY3 (antiblood-group H antibody) and VIM-D5 (CD15) as further markers predictive for the clinical outcome in patients with de novo
AML
.
...
PMID:Prognostic significance of surface marker expression on blasts of patients with de novo acute myeloblastic leukemia. 230 87
Current views about the origin of acute lymphoid leukemia (ALL) emphasize the importance of maturation arrest at a precursor cell level. Recently, the CD22 antigen has been identified in the cytoplasm of normal bone marrow-borne immature B lineage cells, while the CD3 antigen (epsilon chain) has been detected within normal immature thymic blasts. In the first part our study performed on 100 cases of known acute leukemias, the expression of such cytoplasmic molecules, referred to as cCD22 and cCD3, was analyzed together with their appearance in the leukemic cells' membrane (mCD22 and mCD3). The presence of cCD22 in B-lineage ALL and that of cCD3 in T-ALL has indeed fully confirmed the diagnosis reached by other markers, and mCD22 and mCD3 were expressed on only a few cases of B- and T-lineage ALL, also revealing a degree of developmental asynchrony within leukemic blasts. In the subsequent analysis both cCD22 and cCD3 have been included in a standard panel of diagnostic reagents applied on 500 consecutive cases of acute leukemia. Here the aim was to analyze both the diagnostic precision of individual markers and the heterogeneity of various leukemic types in terms of the expression of membrane and intracellular antigens and their cytochemical features (Sudan Black B and esterases). It has been found that cCD22 and cCD3 are exquisitely specific for B-precursor ALL (TdT+, CD19+) and T-ALL (TdT+, CD7+), respectively, while both markers are absent in
acute myeloblastic leukemia
(
AML
) and acute myelomonocytic and monocytic leukemia (AMML/AMoL). These observations contrast the findings which demonstrate that 31% of cases among nonlymphoid acute leukemia (including
AML
and AMML) express
CD7
and/or TdT. The study of myeloid antigens detected by CD13, CD33, and CD14 is also informative and complementary, both in diagnosing and subdividing the
AML
and AMML/AMoL groups. The peculiar main observation of this study is that only with the combined use of these markers in a microplate assay for membrane antigens, followed by double staining for intracellular antigens such as terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase, cCD3, cCD22, c mu heavy chain, and T cell receptor beta, it is possible to safely establish the lineage affiliation and subgrouping of virtually all acute leukemias. Among these cases are those with aberrant combinations of markers, including 14% of B-lineage ALL (cCD22+,CD19+,TdT+) and a single case T-ALL (cCD3+,CD7+,TdT+), which exhibit CD13 and/or CD33 antigens, cases with mixtures of ALL and
AML
blasts, and 1.2% of acute leukemias which lack lineage affiliation and can be regarded as acute undifferentiated leukemia.
...
PMID:The reliability of cytoplasmic CD3 and CD22 antigen expression in the immunodiagnosis of acute leukemia: a study of 500 cases. 246 63
Seventeen patients with
acute myeloid leukaemia
(
AML
) whose blasts co-expressed the T-cell associated
CD7
antibody were identified among 160 consecutive
AML
cases. Fourteen had FAB defined
AML
according to morphocytochemical criteria, whereas three patients were classified as 'MO' on the basis of immunophenotype. The incidence of
CD7
positively was particularly significant in the less differentiated subtypes M0 and M1 compared with other FAB groups (P less than 0.001). In all cases the myeloid determinants CD13 and/or CD33 were associated with
CD7
expression. Other B-lymphoid (CD10, CD19) or T-lymphoid (CD2, surface and cytoplasmic CD3) markers were analysed and found to be negative. Five out of 15 cases examined were TdT+. Clonal rearrangements of the immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) and/or T-cell receptor (TcR) beta chain genes were identified in only three out of 13 cases. Among these, one out of five co-expressing TdT showed IgH rearrangement when analysed at the DNA level. Clinical features at presentation and response to induction therapy did not allow us to consider CD7+
AML
patients as a distinct subgroup with prognostic significance. Our data indicate that
CD7
expression is a common finding in immature
AML
, being generally found in the absence of other T-cell features. Rather than suggesting the occurrence of 'mixed leukaemia', such cases confirm a broader spectrum of
CD7
reactivity and its possible identification of a particular subset of myeloid progenitors.
...
PMID:CD7 positive acute myeloid leukaemia: a subtype associated with cell immaturity. 248 63
A human T-cell line, designated as MKB-1, was established by cloning procedures in a suspension culture from a peripheral blood of a 17-year-old female patient with
acute myeloblastic leukemia
. The immunological marker profile of MKB-1 indicated that unlike a myeloid phenotype of the original leukemic cells, the cells were positive for CD3 (both cell surface and cytoplasm), T cell receptor (TcR) alpha/beta heterodimer, CD4, CD5,
CD7
, CD10, CD57 (Leu7), SN-1 and the cytoplasmic TcR beta chain. These findings indicate the T cell nature of the established cells. Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) was also detected in 60%. We did not detect markers of human myeloid and B cell associated antigens, HLA-class II or immunoglobulin chains. Cytogenetic study revealed that the MKB-1 cells had a female hypo-tetraploid karyotype with chromosomal abnormalities including a translocation between chromosomes 10 and 14. The breakpoint of chromosome 14 of this translocation, 14q11.2, is known to be the location of TcR alpha and delta genes; t(10; 14) (q26; q11.2) is a variant type of a T cell neoplasm-associated translocation, t (10; 14) (q24; q11.2). The MKB-1 cell line is unusual in that its T cell characteristics are phenotypically and cytogenetically distinct from the original myeloid leukemia cells.
...
PMID:Establishment and characterization of a clonal human T-cell line, MKB-1 derived from a patient with acute myeloblastic leukemia. 248 67
Pretreatment peripheral and/or bone marrow blasts from 14 patients with acute unclassifiable leukemia (AUL) expressing myeloid related cell-surface antigen (CDII) or megakaryocyte-platelet related cell-surface antigen (OKM6), were isolated for further analysis in this study. Among 11 cases of CD11+AUL, despite a lack of myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity, one patient's blasts possessed Auer rod in a basophilic cytoplasm and another one's blasts expressed MPO maintaining the same surface phenotype after 20 months of his clinical course. The blast from 2 cases possessed both myelomonocytic and monocyte-specific antigens on the cell-surface, whereas the remaining nine cases completely lacked monocyte-specific antigen which is detectable by monoclonal antibodies, Mo2, My4 and Leu M3 (CD14). In addition, we revealed the presence of MPO protein in the cytoplasm of 3 cases of AUL patients by cytoplasmic immunofluorescence test utilizing monoclonal antibody (MA1). Following these results, the former was diagnosed as acute myelomonocytic leukemia (AMMoL) and the latter as
acute myelogenous leukemia
(
AML
) by immunophenotypic analysis using flow cytometry (FACS IV) and cytoplasmic immunofluorescence test. We have also described three cases of acute megakaryocytic leukemia which were demonstrated by the presence of megakaryocyte-platelet-related cell-surface antigens detected by utilizing flow cytometry and monoclonal antibodies in addition to both the PPO activity which was shown by ultrastructural cytochemistry, and the emergence of differentiation antigens while culturing these leukemic cells. The blast of 1 case possessed both platelet GPIb and GPIIb/IIIa cell-surface antigens detected by 5F1 (CD36), AN51 (CDw42), and J15, P2 and HPL2 (CDw41), respectively, whereas the remaining two cases almont lacked the GPIb cell-surface antigen. Hence, the former was diagnosed as immature (pro) megakaryocytic leukemia and the latter as acute megakaryoblastic leukemia from the viewpoint of immunophenotypic analysis as will be discussed in this article. These leukemic blasts did not express both T-cell lineage antigens which are detectable by monoclonal antibodies, T6 (CD1), T11 (CD2), T3 (CD3), T4 (CD4), T1 (CD5), Tp40, Leu9 (
CD7
), T8 (CD8), and B-cell lineage antigens which are detectable by monoclonal antibodies, B4 (CD19), B1 (CD20), B2 (CD21) and J5 (CD10).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Flow cytometric analysis of myeloperoxidase negative acute unclassifiable leukemias by monoclonal antibodies. Acute myelogenous and acute megakaryocytic leukemia]. 254 Dec 76
Important insights into leukocyte differentiation and the cellular origins of leukemia and lymphoma have been gained through the use of monoclonal antibodies that define cell surface antigens and molecular probes that identify immunoglobulin and T-cell receptor genes. Results of these studies have been combined with markers such as surface membrane and cytoplasmic immunoglobulin on B lymphocytes, sheep erythrocyte receptors on T lymphocytes, and cytochemical stains. After using all of the aforementioned markers, it is now clear that acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is heterogeneous. Furthermore, monoclonal antibodies that identify B cells, such as the anti-CD20 and anti-CD19 antibodies in combination with studies of immunoglobulin gene rearrangement, have demonstrated that virtually all cases of non-T-ALL are malignancies of B-cell origin. At least six distinct subgroups of non-T-ALL can now be identified. T-ALL is subdivided by the anti-
CD7
, anti-CD5, and antibodies that separate T lymphocytes subsets into three primary subgroups. Monoclonal antibodies are also useful in the subclassification of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and certain distinct markers can be correlated with morphological classification. Although monoclonal antibodies are useful in distinguishing acute myeloid from acute lymphoid leukemias, they have less certain utility in the subclassification of
acute myelogenous leukemia
(
AML
). Attempts to subclassify
AML
by differentiation-associated antigens rather than by the French-American-British (FAB) classification are underway in order to document the potential prognostic utility of surface markers. Therapeutic trials using monoclonal antibodies in leukemia and lymphoma have been reported. Intravenous infusion of unlabeled antibodies is the most widely used method; transient responses have been demonstrated. Antibodies conjugated to radionuclides have been quite successful in localizing tumors of less than 1 cm in some studies. Therapy trials with antibodies conjugated to isotopes, toxins, and drugs have shown promise. Purging of autologous bone marrow with monoclonal antibodies and complement in vitro has been used in ALL and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma; preliminary data suggest that this approach may be an effective therapy and may circumvent many of the obstacles and toxicities associated with in vivo monoclonal antibody infusion.
...
PMID:Laboratory and clinical applications of monoclonal antibodies for leukemias and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. 265 57
The immunophenotype of 135 previously untreated patients with FAB defined
acute myeloid leukaemia
(
AML
) was studied at diagnosis. The panel of reagents included monoclonal antibodies (MoAb) recognising myeloid-associated determinants (CD11, CD13, CD14, CD33 and others) as well as MoAb directed towards lymphoid antigens (
CD7
, CD10, CD19) and TdT. The results indicate that CD13 and/or CD33 are consistently expressed in
AML
and only rarely in ALL blasts (131/135 + ve cases, versus 4/130 in ALL). Lymphoid antigen expression was rarely detected when CD10 and CD19 were investigated in
AML
(0.9% and 2% + ve cases, respectively), whereas significant positivities were found for TdT and
CD7
(20% and 10% respectively). Concerning FAB subtypes, two new MoAb (LAM3 and LAM7) proved very useful in the specific recognition of
AML
with monocytic features. The phenotype CD13+ and/or CD33+, CD9+, HLA-DR- was found to be almost exclusive for M3
AML
. The response to induction chemotherapy was analysed in CD7+ and in TdT+ patients. In the latter group a statistically significant lower response rate was found with respect to TdT-ve-
AML
patients.
...
PMID:Immunophenotyping of acute myeloid leukaemia: relevance of analysing different lineage-associated markers. 272 Jan 73
Anti-CD3 (T3) Ab reacting with different proportions of thymocytes (anti-CD3a: UCHT1, anti-CD3b: T10B9, and anti-CD3c: OKT3) were tested for cytoplasmic (cCD3) and membrane (mCD3) expression in the bone marrow, thymus, and blood in man and selected primates. The expression of cCD3a and cCD3c in the perinuclear and Golgi area of large, BrdU-incorporating, strongly TdT+ thymic blasts probably represents one of the earliest signs of T cell commitment, because these blast cells are CD1-, CD4-, CD8-, and mCD3-. The cCD3+, TdT+ cells are normally restricted to the thymus and are absent among the TdT+ cells of bone marrow. The anti-CD3b Ab used, T10B9, co-caps and co-modulates with the other anti-CD3 Ab and is a T cell-specific reagent at a membrane level but does not bind to perinuclear cCD3. Instead, this reagent cross-reacts with a filamentous cytoplasmic network in non-T cells in man and in primates S. oedipus and M. rhesus despite their T cell negativity for mCD3. The characteristics of all T-ALL cases studied: cCD3+, CD7+ along with nuclear TdT+ suggest lineage fidelity to early thymic blasts. As a marked contrast, cCD3 is absent in common ALL and in
AML
, including cases that concomitantly express
CD7
and myeloid antigens. Thus, the cCD3, TdT combination provides a very sensitive assay for residual T-ALL blasts outside the normal thymus.
...
PMID:The cytoplasmic expression of CD3 antigens in normal and malignant cells of the T lymphoid lineage. 309 52
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