Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) is a subtype acute myeloid leukemia in which leukemic promyelocytes predominate in the bone marrow (BM). Rapid diagnosis is critical for treatment decision since all-trans-retinoic acid must be administrated promptly. The microgranular variant may be of difficult diagnosis, as it may be confused with other diseases on morphological grounds. The purpose of this study was to determine if the microgranular variant has the same antigenic profile as the classical hypergranular type. The immunophenotype of leukemic cells from the bone marrow of 50 patients, with the PML-RARa gene rearrangement confirmed by RT-PCR, was determined by flow cytometry using a large panel of 22 monoclonal antibodies and a polyclonal anti-TdT antibody. Thirty-four cases were classified as classical APL and 16 as microgranular APL. The immunophenotypic profile of the two subtypes was indistinguishable concerning the presence or absence of these antigens, including the absence of reactivity for the HLA-DR antigen. The simultaneous immunophenotypic combination of a unique major cell population, heterogeneous intensity of expression of CD13, and the typical pattern of CD15/CD34 expression were similarly present in the hypergranular and microgranular subtypes. Homogeneous expression of CD33 was observed in 76% of the classical APL cases and in 100% of the microgranular cases. Additionally, we have studied two cases of PLZF-RARa APL that also displayed the same immunophenotype described for classical APL. Thus, the immunophenotypic profile highly characteristic of the PML-RARa gene rearrangement was also observed in microgranular and PLZF-RARa variants of APL. Am.
The morphologic characteristics of bone marrow aspirates from patients recovering from acute agranulocytosis may be closely similar to the pattern observed in cases of acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). The clinical manifestation also can be ambiguous in a substantial number of cases. The immunophenotypic features of bone marrow from 5 patients recovering from acute agranulocytosis, showing an increase in the percentage of promyelocytes (26%-66%), were compared with the immunophenotype of 31 consecutive patients with APL whose diagnosis was confirmed by PML-RAR alpha gene rearrangement. All markers were similarly expressed, except for CD117 and CD11b. CD117 was positive in 24 (77%) of the APL cases and in none of the acute agranulocytosis cases. On the other hand, CD11b was positive in 5 (100%) of the acute agranulocytosis cases and in only 2 (6%) of the APL cases. Thus, the CD117-CD11b+ phenotype was detected in all patients recovering from agranulocytosis and in only 1 (3%) of 31 APL cases. Therefore, we suggest that the combination of both markers is helpful in the differentiation of APL from recovering benign myeloid proliferation.
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