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Chronic Lymphoproliferative Disorders (chronic + lymphoproliferative_disorders)
Selected AbstractsUnsupervised immunophenotypic profiling of chronic lymphocytic leukemiaCYTOMETRY, Issue 3 2006Luzette K. Habib Abstract Background Proteomics and functional genomics have revolutionized approaches to disease classification. Like proteomics, flow cytometry (FCM) assesses concurrent expression of many proteins, with the advantage of using intact cells that may be differentially selected during analysis. However, FCM has generally been used for incremental marker validation or construction of predictive models based on known patterns, rather than as a tool for unsupervised class discovery. We undertook a retrospective analysis of clinical FCM data to assess the feasibility of a cell-based proteomic approach to FCM by unsupervised cluster analysis. Methods Multicolor FCM data on peripheral blood (PB) and bone marrow (BM) lymphocytes from 140 consecutive patients with B-cell chronic lymphoproliferative disorders (LPDs), including 81 chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLLs), were studied. Expression was normalized for CD19 totals, and recorded for 10 additional B-cell markers. Data were subjected to hierarchical cluster analysis using complete linkage by Pearson's correlation. Analysis of CLL in PB samples (n = 63) discovered three major clusters. One cluster (14 patients) was skewed toward "atypical" CLL and was characterized by high CD20, CD22, FMC7, and light chain, and low CD23. The remaining two clusters consisted almost entirely (48/49) of cases recorded as typical BCLL. The smaller "typical" BCLL cluster differed from the larger cluster by high CD38 (P = 0.001), low CD20 (P = 0.001), and low CD23 (P = 0.016). These two typical BCLL clusters showed a trend toward a difference in survival (P = 0.1090). Statistically significant cluster stability was demonstrated by expanding the dataset to include BM samples, and by using a method of random sampling with replacement. Conclusions This study supports the concept that unsupervised immunophenotypic profiling of FCM data can yield reproducible subtypes of lymphoma/chronic leukemia. Expanded studies are warranted in the use of FCM as an unsupervised class discovery tool, akin to other proteomic methods, rather than as a validation tool. © 2006 International Society for Analytical Cytology [source] Expression of DNA repair gene Ku80 in lymphoid neoplasmEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY, Issue 6 2005Tsai-Yun Chen Abstract:,Objectives:,Ku, a heterodimer of KU70 and Ku80 that binds to double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs) and activates the catalytic subunit (DNA-PKcs) when DNA is bound, is essential in DSB repair and V(D)J recombination. Ku80 is a putative tumor suppressor gene that might play an important role in drug resistance. Our aim was to determine the role of Ku80 in lymphoid malignancy. Patients and methods:,Competitive reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction assays were performed and the expression levels of Ku80 were measured in normal peripheral blood mononuclear cells (n = 9) and malignant cells from 25 patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) (14 children, 11 adults), and chronic lymphoproliferative disorders (n = 6). The Ku80 transcripts were sequencing for the possibility of mutation. Results:,No mutation or Ku80 variant at the RNA level was seen in any patient samples or in the Raji or CCRF-CEM cell lines. In Ku80 expression, 8.8-, 1.9-, and 6.2-fold mean increases were seen in adult, pediatric ALL, and chronic lymphoid malignancies compared with the control. The Ku80 was significantly higher in adult than in pediatric ALL (P = 0.02). The amount of Ku80 expression in ALL was moderately correlated with peripheral white blood cell counts, but not with Ki67 labeling index. High Ku80 expressers (higher than the mean of all patients with ALL) tended to respond poorly to therapy: Only 22% of high Ku80 expressers achieved durable complete remission compared to 62% of low expressers. Conclusions:,Our study suggests that Ku80 might contribute to generally poor prognoses in adult ALL. [source] Revised guideline on immunophenotyping in acute leukaemias and chronic lymphoproliferative disordersINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LABORATORY HEMATOLOGY, Issue 1 2002B. J. BAIN First page of article [source] CD5-Negative, CD10-Negative small B-cell leukemia: Variant of chronic lymphocytic leukemia or a distinct entity?,AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY, Issue 4 2002Salwa S. Sheikh Abstract CD5- and CD10-negative chronic lymphocytic leukemias are quite uncommon as compared to the CD5-positive CLL. We reviewed 250 sequential cases of peripheral blood lymphocytosis to characterize cases of small B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders, submitted with a clinical diagnosis of chronic lymphocytic leukemia exhibiting a non-classic immunophenotypic profile. Six cases of CD5-, CD10-negative chronic lymphocytic leukemias and no tissue involvement were identified that revealed high-density surface-membrane immunoglobulin and CD20 expression, with variable expression of CD11c, CD23, and CD25. Most had a profound leukocytosis (mean WBC 180 × 109/L) with proliferation of mature-appearing lymphocytes. Subsequent bone marrow biopsies showed diffuse infiltration by neoplastic cells in all evaluated patients. The clinical course appeared indolent, with follow-up revealing three patients alive (survival time 38,68 months), while two died of unrelated causes and one was lost to follow-up soon after diagnosis. These cases may represent somewhat unusual chronic lymphoproliferative disorders, with morphologic features and immunophenotypic profile not readily classifiable, but which are certainly atypical for classic chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Some of these features are reminiscent of those seen in marginal-zone lymphoma. However, it is most unusual for this known to be tissue-based disease to present primarily as leukemia rather than lymphoma. Am. J. Hematol. 71:306,310, 2002. © 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] |