Diagnosis and classification of the acute leukemias: recent advances and controversial issues.

C G Taylor, R Stasi, C Bastianelli, A Venditti, G Del Poeta, S Amadori, J Sargent
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Abstract

Although morphology and cytochemistry continue to be the mainstay of the diagnosis of acute leukemia (AL), new developments in immunophenotyping, cytogenetics, molecular biology, and in vitro assays have dramatically improved our understanding of this disease and enabled the identification of entities with distinct clinico-biologic features. Immunophenotyping is essential for diagnosing and subclassifying acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and is also very helpful in certain types of acute myeloid leukemias (AML), such as AML with minimal differentiation or acute megakaryoblastic leukemia. Cytogenetic findings are clinically relevant for diagnosis and prognosis. Nonrandom chromosomal abnormalities such as t(15;17)(q22;q12) or t(1;19)(q23;p13) have been so closely associated with distinct types of acute leukemias that their recognition can allow diagnosis independent of the other criteria. Molecular analysis is a powerful method in the assessment of the malignant potential, clonality, and classification of the ALs. It has become clear that in some leukemias a proportion of patients exhibit the biologically relevant molecular defect in the absence of a karyotypic equivalent. On the other hand apparently uniform chromosomal abnormalities such as the t(1;19), t(9;22), t(8;14), or t(15;17) may differ at the molecular level. In vitro assays can evaluate the growth pattern and cell-cycle kinetics of leukemic cells, as well as their sensitivity to therapeutic agents. All these data are relevant to the management of AL. Because the French-American-British (FAB) classification does not fully correlate with much of this new information, alternative classifications have been proposed. In this review we concentrate on recent diagnostic contributions resulting from advances in biotechnology and discuss some of the points that arouse controversy in the single classifications.

急性白血病的诊断和分类:最新进展和争议问题。
尽管形态学和细胞化学仍然是诊断急性白血病(AL)的主要方法,但免疫表型、细胞遗传学、分子生物学和体外检测的新进展极大地提高了我们对这种疾病的认识,并使识别具有不同临床生物学特征的实体成为可能。免疫表型分型对急性淋巴细胞白血病(ALL)的诊断和亚分类是必不可少的,对某些类型的急性髓性白血病(AML)也很有帮助,如轻度分化的AML或急性巨核细胞白血病。细胞遗传学结果与临床诊断和预后相关。非随机染色体异常,如t(15;17)(q22;q12)或t(1;19)(q23;p13)与不同类型的急性白血病密切相关,因此它们的识别可以使诊断独立于其他标准。分子分析是评估ALs的恶性潜能、克隆性和分类的有力方法。很明显,在一些白血病中,一部分患者在没有核型等同物的情况下表现出生物学相关的分子缺陷。另一方面,明显一致的染色体异常,如t(1;19)、t(9;22)、t(8;14)或t(15;17)可能在分子水平上有所不同。体外试验可以评估白血病细胞的生长模式和细胞周期动力学,以及它们对治疗剂的敏感性。所有这些数据都与AL的管理有关。由于法国-美国-英国(FAB)分类与这些新信息并不完全相关,因此提出了替代分类。在这篇综述中,我们集中讨论了最近由于生物技术的进步所带来的诊断贡献,并讨论了在单一分类中引起争议的一些问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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