Abstract
The selectivity of a monoclonal anti-T antibody, designated WT1, has been assessed in a series of 906 leukemias and lymphomas. In acute lymphoblastic leukemias, WT1 reacts comprehensively and selectively with thymic acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cells in untreated or relapsed patients, thus overriding the extensive antigenic diversity of this cancer and the immaturity of the cell type involved. All 80 cases of thymic ALL examined were WT1-positive. In addition, 18 cases of presumptive prethymic ALL were also WT1-positive, but were unreactive with other maturation-linked T-cell markers. The phenotype WT1+ HLA-DR TdT+ appears to be unique to T-ALL and can therefore be used systematically for the differential diagnosis of this poor prognosis subtype of ALL. Virtually all ALL cases can now be placed into one of two major subgroups representing transformed precursors of either the T- or B-cell lineage. WT1 identifies a single polypeptide of approximately 40,000 mol wt and is similar to two previously described monoclonal antibodies.