The combination of interferon and cytarabine, as compared with interferon alone, increases the rate of major cytogenetic response and prolongs survival in patients with the chronic phase of chronic myelogenous leukemia.
Chromosome analysis on CLL-cells from 649 patients revealed clonal changes in 311 cases (48%). The most common abnormalities were trisomy 12 (n = 112), and structural changes on the long arm of chromosome 13 (n = 62), most of them interstitial deletions or translocations involving 13q14, the site of the retinoblastoma gene. Complex karyotypes were associated with poor prognosis, although karyotypic changes rarely develop during the course of the disease. Among patients with single chromosomal abnormalities those with trisomy 12 had a poor survival, whereas those with structural changes on chromosome 13 had as good a prognosis as patients with a normal karyotype.
In vitro amplification of the Bcr-Abl cDNA has been widely used to assess for the presence of minimal residual disease in patients with chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML) presenting with complete clinical and cytogenetic remission. However, the level of sensitivity achieved in different laboratories remains largely unknown. Moreover, the results are usually expressed as positive or negative, making a precise follow-up of the patients difficult. In an attempt to overcome these limitations, we devised a quantitative method to measure the amount of Bcr-Abl mRNA in clinical samples. This methodology involves a single reverse transcription step, followed by separate amplifications of Bcr-Abl and total Abl mRNA. These two amplifications are performed in the presence of different dilutions of a same internal standard. This standard consists of Bcr-Abl sequences with an eight bases deletion in exon 2 of Abl. One of the primers used in each separate reaction is labelled with fluorescein. Following amplification, PCR products derived from cellular RNA and those from the internal standard are separated and their relative fluorescence is determined using a laser fluorescent DNA sequencer (ALF, Pharmacia). The number of Bcr-Abl and total Abl mRNA molecules initially present in each sample is then calculated. The accuracy and reproducibility of this method was assessed by studying serial dilutions of K562 RNA into normal RNA. Blood samples from 10 patients in cytogenetic remission under interferon therapy were studied. Only one sample was found negative while the others contained between 0.05 and 17 hybrid Bcr-Abl mRNA molecules per 1000 molecules of Abl mRNA. These results suggest that a variable number of malignant cells are present in the majority of CML patients in cytogenetic remission following interferon therapy.
Cytogenetic abnormalities found in four cases of T-cell prolymphocytic leukaemia (T-PLL) are described. An isochromosome 8q was found in three patients and a t(8;8) in one. In the four cases, karyotypes were complex and showed a high degree of instability. In addition, we reviewed 27 published cases of cytogenetically studied T-PLL. On the whole, the most frequently recurring anomalies in T-PLL are 14q lesions with nonrandom breakpoints, inversion (14)(q11q32) or tandem translocations (14;14) (not seen in any of our cases) and trisomy for 8q. mainly due to i(8q), found in more than 40% of patients each. Similar structural anomalies were found almost as frequently among the 23 cytogenetically studied cases of so-called T-chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (T-CLL) reported prior to 1989. It is now accepted that the T-cell counterpart of B-CLL either does not exist or is exceedingly rare and thus previously reported cases of T-CLL sharing the chromosomal characteristics of T-PLL may well have been misdiagnosed examples of T-PLL. Isochromosomes 8q are exceptionally found in other types of haematological malignancies. However, i(8q) could not be shown to be the primary lesion in any case in T-PLL and the role of trisomy for 8q, as well of the associated monosomy 8p, is entirely unknown.
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