Abstract
Plasma levels of soluble T-suppressor/cytotoxic antigen (sCD8) were measured at diagnosis or before systemic treatment in 69 patients with hairy cell leukemia (HCL). The 49 nonsplenectomized patients were characterized by high concentrations of sCD8 antigen as compared with 17 controls (P less than .0001). The median sCD8 level in non- splenectomized patients was 1,050 U/mL (range: 160 to 2,400 U/mL) and was significantly higher (P less than .0001) than the median of 275 U/mL (range: 20 to 1,080 U/mL) in splenectomized patients. The relationship of sCD8 to clinical response to subsequent interferon alpha (IFN alpha) treatment was analyzed. Patients who showed subsequent hematologic response with normalization of all blood counts had significantly lower levels of sCD8 concentrations at diagnosis than those who did not (P = .0056). Furthermore, normalization of sCD8 during IFN alpha treatment paralleled the achievement of normal counts in peripheral blood, whereas soluble interleukin-2 receptor (sIL-2R) levels remained high in most patients after 12 to 15 months of treatment. We speculate that activation of suppressor/cytotoxic T cells might play a role in myelosuppression, and its modulation during treatment with IFN alpha correlates with normalization in peripheral blood counts.