Abstract
Cytogenetic studies were made on 160 patients with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL) between 1963 and 1979, of whom 115 had acute myelocytic leukemia with 67 patients showing aneuploidy (58.3%). Among these, 24 patients were found to have similar chromosome alterations that appeared to involve specifically chromosomes 8 and 21. Banding studies on at least 7 of these patients confirmed the presence of a translocation between these two chromosomes. Of 160 ANLL patients, 142 were scored for neutrophil alkaline phosphatase (neutrophil AP) at the time of diagnosis. Fifty-nine patients showed a low neutrophil AP score, 42 a normal value, and 41 a high value. All patients with 8;21 (or C/G) translocation had a low neutrophil AP score and leukemic cells with maturation (M2 of FAB classification) in the bone marrow. In vitro liquid culture for 2 wk of 8;21 translocated leukemic cells revealed no increase of neutrophil AP activity nor increase of mature granulocytes, whereas 9;22 translocated chronic myelocytic leukemia cells with a low neutrophil AP score did so. Neutrophil AP score at the time of diagnosis in acute myelocytic leukemia is very useful for detecting 8;21 translocation AML and for studying the pathophysiology and genetic alterations of the characteristic subgroup of AML with 8′21 translocation.
This feature is available to Subscribers Only
Sign In or Create an Account Close Modal