Issue Highlights—September 2022

IF 2.3 3区 医学 Q3 MEDICAL LABORATORY TECHNOLOGY
Paul K. Wallace
{"title":"Issue Highlights—September 2022","authors":"Paul K. Wallace","doi":"10.1002/cyto.b.22091","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>The second paper addresses difficulties using CD19 to detect B-ALL MRD leukemic cells following CD19-directed treatments, such as blinatumomab and CAR-T cells directed against CD19. In these cases, alternatives other than CD19 antibodies are needed (Mikhailova et al., <span>2021</span>; Pillai et al., <span>2019</span>). Ekaterina Mikhailova et al. at the National Medical Research Center of Pediatric Hematology, Oncology, and Immunology in Moscow report here on the use of CD22, CD24, and intracellular CD79a (iCD79a) in combination with CD10 (Mikhailova et al., <span>2022</span>). Up to 519 samples from children with B-ALL were included in their study in which they found CD22, CD24, and iCD79a are expressed by &gt;95% of leukemic cells. Nevertheless, no single antigen was without limitations. For example, CD22 is low to unexpressed in B-ALL patients with <i>KMT2A</i> rearrangements (Shah et al., <span>2015</span>); CD24 is expressed on granulocytes thus requiring a marker such as CD66b to exclude them (Zhang et al., <span>2020</span>); and iCD79a requires intracellular staining which can lead to cell losses and can impact staining intensities (Soh et al., <span>2020</span>). Consequently, the authors recommend including all of these antigens in a panel with CD10. They describe an algorithm using CD22 and iCD79a as the primary gating antigens, which in their studies would have worked in 79.8% of their patients. If either marker is only partially expressed, then the marker with complete antigen expression is used. Using that strategy, leukemic B cells in 98% of their patients could be defined. For the remaining 2% they recommend using CD24 and CD10.</p><p>In the last B-ALL related manuscript from this issue, the immunophenotype of <i>ZNF384</i> rearrangements in adult B-ALL is described. This rearrangement was first reported in 2002 (Martini et al., <span>2002</span>) and at least 10 or more fusion partners with <i>ZNF384</i> have now been found (Hirabayashi et al., <span>2021</span>). Patients with a <i>ZNF384</i> rearrangement usually do not have overly aggressive disease and express either a B-ALL or mixed B/myeloid acute leukemia phenotype. Ya-Zhe Wang et al. from the Peking University People's Hospital report here on their retrospective studies of 43 adults with <i>ZNF384</i> rearranged B-ALL and contrast their findings with other B-ALL patients including groups with <i>BCR-ABL</i>, and <i>KMT2A</i> rearrangements (Wang et al., <span>2022</span>). They conclude that B-ALL cells from patients with <i>ZNF384</i> rearrangements generally had significantly lower expression of CD10 and higher levels of expression of CD13, CD33, and CD123. The one exception was CD10 expression on cells from patients with the <i>ZNF384</i> was higher than on <i>KMT2A</i> rearrangements. Using this information, the authors propose a scoring system with CD10, CD13, CD33, and CD123 to predict <i>ZNF384</i> rearrangement.</p><p>Next, two Original Articles in this issue look at the application of flow cytometry to hemolytic disorders. In the first, Yael Shahal-Zimra, et al. from the Bellinson Hospital in Petah Tikva Israel reports on the refinement of an RBC fragility assay to diagnose Hereditary spherocytosis. In the second, Awirut Charoensappakit from Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok, Thailand describes methodology to distinguish glomerular hematuria from non-glomerular hematuria.</p><p>Hereditary spherocytosis is a common inherited congenital hemolytic anemia caused by mutations in several genes coding for structural membrane proteins that lead to a spherical RBC shape. This spherical rather than concave shape interferes with their circulation making them prone to rupture and removal by the spleen (He et al., <span>2018</span>). Two tests are used for diagnosis, the osmotic fragility test which measures the amount of hemolysis by different osmotic solutions and the Eosin-5'maleimide dye binding test (EMA) which binds to band 3 proteins in RBCs membranes and are deficient in hereditary spherocytosis (More et al., <span>2020</span>; Yamamoto et al., <span>2014</span>). Both can be done by flow cytometry and when performed in combination can correctly diagnose 100% of hereditary spherocytosis patients. In this issue, Yael Shahal-Zimra, et al. from the Rabin Medical Center in Pethah Tikva, Israel reports on a more efficient osmotic fragility flow cytometric test and compare it to both the classical osmotic fragility and EMA tests for the diagnosis of hereditary spherocytosis (Shahal-Zimra et al., <span>2021</span>). Their use of flow cytometry for both diagnostic methods simplify procedures, reduces sample requirements, improves accuracy, and yields more rapid results.</p><p>Glomerular disease, associated with proteinuria and hematuria are diagnosed by the morphological quantification of dysmorphic RBC's in the urine (Hamadah et al., <span>2018</span>). However, the morphological definition used to characterize dysmorphic RBCs has not been standardized resulting in difficulty classifying patients with hematuria. Flow cytometric approaches to distinguish the origin of hematuria have to now shown limited capacity to discriminate glomerular from non-glomerular causes of hematuria (Scharnhorst et al., <span>2006</span>). Here Awirut Charoensappakit et al. describes a novel flow cytometric approach looking at the relationship between surface phosphatidylserine expression on RBCs and RBC derived micro particles. The authors use sizing beads to define large micro particles in urine samples with CD235a and annexing V and to define RBCs and their expression of phosphatidylserine (Dave et al., <span>2022</span>; Sutherland et al., <span>2020</span>). They demonstrate increased numbers of RBC derived micro particles and surface phosphatidylserine expressing RBCs in patients with glomerular hemolysis versus patients with non-glomerular hemolysis. The authors speculate these differences are related to differences between the patients' pathology. RBCs found in the urine of patients with glomerular hemolysis must pass through damaged glomeruli placing them under shear stresses resulting in changes to the RBC membrane cytoskeleton and causing increased expression of surface phosphatidylserine and numbers of RBC derived micro particles. While these results need to be evaluated in a larger study, if substantiated would considerably help in the differentiation between glomerular and non-glomerular hematuria.</p><p>The sixth Original Article addresses an issue of reduced HLADR expression on blood samples collected in BCT tubes for clinical trials evaluating immunostiumulating agents. HLADR expression on blood monocytes is considered a robust marker of immunosuppression in severely injured ICU patients and is being used as a stratification criteria in clinical trials (Eksioglu-Demiralp et al., <span>2022</span>, Venet, 2021 #29; Payen et al., <span>2019</span>). Reliable methods to measure HLADR on monocytes in multicenter clinical trials incorporating Quantribright beads and collection in BCT tubes have been developed that enable shipment of samples to a central location for evaluation (Quadrini et al., <span>2021</span>). However, Sarah Hamada et al. at Edouard Herriot Hospital in Lyon and others at University of Limoges in Limoges, France in this issue reveal that samples collected in BCT tubes have a significantly lower HLADR expression on monocytes than samples collected in EDTA – the anti-coagulant originally used to establish cutoff thresholds for immunosuppression (Hamada et al., <span>2021</span>). In fact, samples collected in BCT tubes from most patients in their study were below the threshold indicative of immunosuppression but were found above the cutoff if collected in EDTA. The authors caution a larger study to establish a new cutoff threshold for samples collected in BCT tubes is warranted.</p><p>Anyone using the AQUIOS for T, B, and NK cell reporting will be interested in the seventh Original Article in this issue. Léa Lemoine et al. from the Edouard Herriot Hospital in Lyon, France report on a decision tree they developed which addresses most AQUIOS automated analysis irregularities (Lemoine et al., <span>2022</span>). Previously, Degandt et al. reported that a substantial number of T, B, and NK results from the AQUIOS CL had run ‘notifications’ indicating an abnormal cell distribution or population had been detected and the samples either had to be rerun or manually gated resulting in what they describe as ‘revision fatigue’ among operators (Degandt et al., <span>2018</span>). This, despite the fact that in cross-institutional surveys the AQUIOS has shown better precision and robustness then other IVD/CE approved T, B, and NK methods (Ticchioni et al., <span>2019</span>). Looking at 862 samples collected over a 10-day period, Lemoine et al. confirmed Degandt et al. observation. Among their 862 analyses, 25.4% showed on one or more dot plot analysis irregularities. These irregularities could be classified into four categories and the authors used these data to develop a decision tree. Applying their decision tree, 94% of the AQUIOS results could be released without additional bench work. The remaining were restrained and run on a convention cytometer.</p><p>The remaining articles in this issue include three Letters to the Editor and an eighth Original Article which describe a 4 color protocol to assess viability, acrosome integrity, and mitochondrial activity in boar spermatozoa using Hoechst 33342, peanut agglutinin, propidium iodide, and MitoTracker Deep Red™ (Gonzalez-Castro et al., <span>2022</span>).</p><p>The first Letter to the Editor submitted by Bartosz Grzywacz et al. at the University of Minnesota (Grzywacz et al., <span>2021</span>) confirms the work of Lyapichev et al. (Lyapichev et al., <span>2021</span>) regarding the presence of CD7 negative and CD26 negative populations in healthy individuals. They further extend these finding to patients with autoimmune disease, abnormal peripheral blood counts, and circulating clonal B cells. Thus, emphasizing that the presence of CD4+ T cells lacking either CD7 and/or CD26 are not specific to Sezary syndrome and mycosis fungoides and the need to quantify Sezary syndrome and mycosis fungoides by enumerating immunophenotypically aberrant CD4+ T-cells, rather than CD26- or CD7- in isolation. (Craig, <span>2021</span>; Horna et al., <span>2021</span>; Illingworth et al., <span>2021</span>).</p><p>The next two Letters to the Editor are Case Reports. The first is a fascinating one from Joseph Rohr et al. (Rohr et al., <span>2021</span>) describes a newborn with cartilage hair hypoplasia (CHH) a primary immunodeficiency affecting both cellular and humoral immunity (Rohr et al., <span>2021</span>). Flow cytometric evaluation of the newborn's blood was performed starting at day 5 and week 4. At week 5, the patient received an unrelated bone marrow transplant. Thereafter flow immunophenotyping was performed on months 4 and 5. Interestingly, the patients immunophenotyping findings, which are reported here, appear to recapitulate in part the prenatal generation of thymocytes, referred to as layered immune constitution (Davenport et al., <span>2020</span>).</p><p>Finally, the second Case Study is presented by Eman Abdelghani, Clifford Mueller, and Huifei Liu from the Ohio State University College of Medicine and Esoterix Pathology Practice Group. They describe an abnormal, transient lymphomyelopoiesis resembling a mixed phenotype acute leukemia in a newborn patient with Nooan syndrome (Abdelghani et al., <span>2022</span>). A number of genetic mutations can result in Noonan syndrome, which may be inherited as an autosomal dominant condition or occur as a new mutation (Roberts et al., <span>2013</span>). Patients present with mildly unusual facial features, short height, congenital heart disease, bleeding problems, and skeletal malformations. It is defined as a RASopathy, a group of genetic conditions caused by mutations in genes of the RAS-MAPK pathway. A CBC on this patient 14 days after birth showed a leukocytosis, polycythemia, and thrombocytopenia. Flow cytometry detected lymphoblasts (11.6%), myeloblasts (9.8) and monocytes (23.3%) suggesting a congenital mixed phenotype acute leukemia (Porwit &amp; Bene, <span>2019</span>). Next generation sequencing detected a missense mutation in PTPN11 a signaling molecule in the RAS/MAPK pathway. The patient remained stable and a watch and wait strategy was chosen. At 9 months of age though a persistent monocytosis remained but the CBC had returned to the normal range with low levels of circulating lymphoblasts (0.04%) and myeloblasts (0.2%).</p>","PeriodicalId":10883,"journal":{"name":"Cytometry Part B: Clinical Cytometry","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":2.3000,"publicationDate":"2022-09-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/cyto.b.22091","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Cytometry Part B: Clinical Cytometry","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cyto.b.22091","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"MEDICAL LABORATORY TECHNOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

The second paper addresses difficulties using CD19 to detect B-ALL MRD leukemic cells following CD19-directed treatments, such as blinatumomab and CAR-T cells directed against CD19. In these cases, alternatives other than CD19 antibodies are needed (Mikhailova et al., 2021; Pillai et al., 2019). Ekaterina Mikhailova et al. at the National Medical Research Center of Pediatric Hematology, Oncology, and Immunology in Moscow report here on the use of CD22, CD24, and intracellular CD79a (iCD79a) in combination with CD10 (Mikhailova et al., 2022). Up to 519 samples from children with B-ALL were included in their study in which they found CD22, CD24, and iCD79a are expressed by >95% of leukemic cells. Nevertheless, no single antigen was without limitations. For example, CD22 is low to unexpressed in B-ALL patients with KMT2A rearrangements (Shah et al., 2015); CD24 is expressed on granulocytes thus requiring a marker such as CD66b to exclude them (Zhang et al., 2020); and iCD79a requires intracellular staining which can lead to cell losses and can impact staining intensities (Soh et al., 2020). Consequently, the authors recommend including all of these antigens in a panel with CD10. They describe an algorithm using CD22 and iCD79a as the primary gating antigens, which in their studies would have worked in 79.8% of their patients. If either marker is only partially expressed, then the marker with complete antigen expression is used. Using that strategy, leukemic B cells in 98% of their patients could be defined. For the remaining 2% they recommend using CD24 and CD10.

In the last B-ALL related manuscript from this issue, the immunophenotype of ZNF384 rearrangements in adult B-ALL is described. This rearrangement was first reported in 2002 (Martini et al., 2002) and at least 10 or more fusion partners with ZNF384 have now been found (Hirabayashi et al., 2021). Patients with a ZNF384 rearrangement usually do not have overly aggressive disease and express either a B-ALL or mixed B/myeloid acute leukemia phenotype. Ya-Zhe Wang et al. from the Peking University People's Hospital report here on their retrospective studies of 43 adults with ZNF384 rearranged B-ALL and contrast their findings with other B-ALL patients including groups with BCR-ABL, and KMT2A rearrangements (Wang et al., 2022). They conclude that B-ALL cells from patients with ZNF384 rearrangements generally had significantly lower expression of CD10 and higher levels of expression of CD13, CD33, and CD123. The one exception was CD10 expression on cells from patients with the ZNF384 was higher than on KMT2A rearrangements. Using this information, the authors propose a scoring system with CD10, CD13, CD33, and CD123 to predict ZNF384 rearrangement.

Next, two Original Articles in this issue look at the application of flow cytometry to hemolytic disorders. In the first, Yael Shahal-Zimra, et al. from the Bellinson Hospital in Petah Tikva Israel reports on the refinement of an RBC fragility assay to diagnose Hereditary spherocytosis. In the second, Awirut Charoensappakit from Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok, Thailand describes methodology to distinguish glomerular hematuria from non-glomerular hematuria.

Hereditary spherocytosis is a common inherited congenital hemolytic anemia caused by mutations in several genes coding for structural membrane proteins that lead to a spherical RBC shape. This spherical rather than concave shape interferes with their circulation making them prone to rupture and removal by the spleen (He et al., 2018). Two tests are used for diagnosis, the osmotic fragility test which measures the amount of hemolysis by different osmotic solutions and the Eosin-5'maleimide dye binding test (EMA) which binds to band 3 proteins in RBCs membranes and are deficient in hereditary spherocytosis (More et al., 2020; Yamamoto et al., 2014). Both can be done by flow cytometry and when performed in combination can correctly diagnose 100% of hereditary spherocytosis patients. In this issue, Yael Shahal-Zimra, et al. from the Rabin Medical Center in Pethah Tikva, Israel reports on a more efficient osmotic fragility flow cytometric test and compare it to both the classical osmotic fragility and EMA tests for the diagnosis of hereditary spherocytosis (Shahal-Zimra et al., 2021). Their use of flow cytometry for both diagnostic methods simplify procedures, reduces sample requirements, improves accuracy, and yields more rapid results.

Glomerular disease, associated with proteinuria and hematuria are diagnosed by the morphological quantification of dysmorphic RBC's in the urine (Hamadah et al., 2018). However, the morphological definition used to characterize dysmorphic RBCs has not been standardized resulting in difficulty classifying patients with hematuria. Flow cytometric approaches to distinguish the origin of hematuria have to now shown limited capacity to discriminate glomerular from non-glomerular causes of hematuria (Scharnhorst et al., 2006). Here Awirut Charoensappakit et al. describes a novel flow cytometric approach looking at the relationship between surface phosphatidylserine expression on RBCs and RBC derived micro particles. The authors use sizing beads to define large micro particles in urine samples with CD235a and annexing V and to define RBCs and their expression of phosphatidylserine (Dave et al., 2022; Sutherland et al., 2020). They demonstrate increased numbers of RBC derived micro particles and surface phosphatidylserine expressing RBCs in patients with glomerular hemolysis versus patients with non-glomerular hemolysis. The authors speculate these differences are related to differences between the patients' pathology. RBCs found in the urine of patients with glomerular hemolysis must pass through damaged glomeruli placing them under shear stresses resulting in changes to the RBC membrane cytoskeleton and causing increased expression of surface phosphatidylserine and numbers of RBC derived micro particles. While these results need to be evaluated in a larger study, if substantiated would considerably help in the differentiation between glomerular and non-glomerular hematuria.

The sixth Original Article addresses an issue of reduced HLADR expression on blood samples collected in BCT tubes for clinical trials evaluating immunostiumulating agents. HLADR expression on blood monocytes is considered a robust marker of immunosuppression in severely injured ICU patients and is being used as a stratification criteria in clinical trials (Eksioglu-Demiralp et al., 2022, Venet, 2021 #29; Payen et al., 2019). Reliable methods to measure HLADR on monocytes in multicenter clinical trials incorporating Quantribright beads and collection in BCT tubes have been developed that enable shipment of samples to a central location for evaluation (Quadrini et al., 2021). However, Sarah Hamada et al. at Edouard Herriot Hospital in Lyon and others at University of Limoges in Limoges, France in this issue reveal that samples collected in BCT tubes have a significantly lower HLADR expression on monocytes than samples collected in EDTA – the anti-coagulant originally used to establish cutoff thresholds for immunosuppression (Hamada et al., 2021). In fact, samples collected in BCT tubes from most patients in their study were below the threshold indicative of immunosuppression but were found above the cutoff if collected in EDTA. The authors caution a larger study to establish a new cutoff threshold for samples collected in BCT tubes is warranted.

Anyone using the AQUIOS for T, B, and NK cell reporting will be interested in the seventh Original Article in this issue. Léa Lemoine et al. from the Edouard Herriot Hospital in Lyon, France report on a decision tree they developed which addresses most AQUIOS automated analysis irregularities (Lemoine et al., 2022). Previously, Degandt et al. reported that a substantial number of T, B, and NK results from the AQUIOS CL had run ‘notifications’ indicating an abnormal cell distribution or population had been detected and the samples either had to be rerun or manually gated resulting in what they describe as ‘revision fatigue’ among operators (Degandt et al., 2018). This, despite the fact that in cross-institutional surveys the AQUIOS has shown better precision and robustness then other IVD/CE approved T, B, and NK methods (Ticchioni et al., 2019). Looking at 862 samples collected over a 10-day period, Lemoine et al. confirmed Degandt et al. observation. Among their 862 analyses, 25.4% showed on one or more dot plot analysis irregularities. These irregularities could be classified into four categories and the authors used these data to develop a decision tree. Applying their decision tree, 94% of the AQUIOS results could be released without additional bench work. The remaining were restrained and run on a convention cytometer.

The remaining articles in this issue include three Letters to the Editor and an eighth Original Article which describe a 4 color protocol to assess viability, acrosome integrity, and mitochondrial activity in boar spermatozoa using Hoechst 33342, peanut agglutinin, propidium iodide, and MitoTracker Deep Red™ (Gonzalez-Castro et al., 2022).

The first Letter to the Editor submitted by Bartosz Grzywacz et al. at the University of Minnesota (Grzywacz et al., 2021) confirms the work of Lyapichev et al. (Lyapichev et al., 2021) regarding the presence of CD7 negative and CD26 negative populations in healthy individuals. They further extend these finding to patients with autoimmune disease, abnormal peripheral blood counts, and circulating clonal B cells. Thus, emphasizing that the presence of CD4+ T cells lacking either CD7 and/or CD26 are not specific to Sezary syndrome and mycosis fungoides and the need to quantify Sezary syndrome and mycosis fungoides by enumerating immunophenotypically aberrant CD4+ T-cells, rather than CD26- or CD7- in isolation. (Craig, 2021; Horna et al., 2021; Illingworth et al., 2021).

The next two Letters to the Editor are Case Reports. The first is a fascinating one from Joseph Rohr et al. (Rohr et al., 2021) describes a newborn with cartilage hair hypoplasia (CHH) a primary immunodeficiency affecting both cellular and humoral immunity (Rohr et al., 2021). Flow cytometric evaluation of the newborn's blood was performed starting at day 5 and week 4. At week 5, the patient received an unrelated bone marrow transplant. Thereafter flow immunophenotyping was performed on months 4 and 5. Interestingly, the patients immunophenotyping findings, which are reported here, appear to recapitulate in part the prenatal generation of thymocytes, referred to as layered immune constitution (Davenport et al., 2020).

Finally, the second Case Study is presented by Eman Abdelghani, Clifford Mueller, and Huifei Liu from the Ohio State University College of Medicine and Esoterix Pathology Practice Group. They describe an abnormal, transient lymphomyelopoiesis resembling a mixed phenotype acute leukemia in a newborn patient with Nooan syndrome (Abdelghani et al., 2022). A number of genetic mutations can result in Noonan syndrome, which may be inherited as an autosomal dominant condition or occur as a new mutation (Roberts et al., 2013). Patients present with mildly unusual facial features, short height, congenital heart disease, bleeding problems, and skeletal malformations. It is defined as a RASopathy, a group of genetic conditions caused by mutations in genes of the RAS-MAPK pathway. A CBC on this patient 14 days after birth showed a leukocytosis, polycythemia, and thrombocytopenia. Flow cytometry detected lymphoblasts (11.6%), myeloblasts (9.8) and monocytes (23.3%) suggesting a congenital mixed phenotype acute leukemia (Porwit & Bene, 2019). Next generation sequencing detected a missense mutation in PTPN11 a signaling molecule in the RAS/MAPK pathway. The patient remained stable and a watch and wait strategy was chosen. At 9 months of age though a persistent monocytosis remained but the CBC had returned to the normal range with low levels of circulating lymphoblasts (0.04%) and myeloblasts (0.2%).

Abstract Image

发行亮点- 2022年9月
第二篇论文解决了使用CD19靶向治疗(如blinatumomab和针对CD19的CAR-T细胞)后使用CD19检测B-ALL MRD白血病细胞的困难。在这些情况下,需要CD19抗体以外的替代品(Mikhailova等人,2021;Pillai et al., 2019)。莫斯科儿童血液学、肿瘤学和免疫学国家医学研究中心的Ekaterina Mikhailova等人在这里报告了CD22、CD24和细胞内CD79a (iCD79a)与CD10联合使用的情况(Mikhailova等人,2022)。多达519份来自B-ALL儿童的样本被纳入他们的研究,他们发现95%的白血病细胞表达CD22、CD24和iCD79a。然而,没有一种抗原是没有局限性的。例如,CD22在KMT2A重排的B-ALL患者中低表达或不表达(Shah等,2015);CD24在粒细胞上表达,因此需要CD66b等标志物来排除它们(Zhang et al., 2020);iCD79a需要细胞内染色,这可能导致细胞损失并影响染色强度(Soh et al., 2020)。因此,作者建议将所有这些抗原与CD10一起纳入一个小组。他们描述了一种使用CD22和iCD79a作为主要门控抗原的算法,在他们的研究中,这种算法对79.8%的患者有效。如果任一标记物仅部分表达,则使用完全抗原表达的标记物。使用这种策略,98%的病人体内的白血病B细胞可以被确定。对于剩下的2%,他们推荐使用CD24和CD10。在本刊最后一篇与B-ALL相关的文章中,描述了成人B-ALL中ZNF384重排的免疫表型。2002年首次报道了这种重排(Martini et al., 2002),目前已经发现了至少10个或更多与ZNF384的融合伙伴(Hirabayashi et al., 2021)。ZNF384重排的患者通常没有过度侵袭性疾病,表达B- all或混合B/髓性急性白血病表型。北京大学人民医院的王亚哲等人报道了他们对43名成人ZNF384重排B-ALL患者的回顾性研究,并将他们的研究结果与其他B-ALL患者进行了对比,包括BCR-ABL和KMT2A重排组(Wang et al., 2022)。他们得出结论,来自ZNF384重排患者的B-ALL细胞通常CD10的表达显著降低,而CD13、CD33和CD123的表达水平较高。唯一的例外是,来自ZNF384患者的细胞中的CD10表达高于KMT2A重排。利用这些信息,作者提出了一个包含CD10、CD13、CD33和CD123的评分系统来预测ZNF384重排。接下来,这期的两篇原创文章着眼于流式细胞术在溶血性疾病中的应用。在第一篇报道中,以色列Petah Tikva Bellinson医院的Yael Shahal-Zimra等人报道了一种用于诊断遗传性球形红细胞增生症的红细胞易碎性测定方法的改进。在第二篇文章中,泰国曼谷朱拉隆功大学的Awirut Charoensappakit描述了区分肾小球性血尿和非肾小球性血尿的方法。遗传性球形红细胞增多症是一种常见的遗传性先天性溶血性贫血,由编码结构膜蛋白的几个基因突变引起球形红细胞形状。这种球形而非凹形的形状干扰了它们的循环,使它们容易破裂并被脾脏移除(He et al., 2018)。两种测试用于诊断,渗透脆弱性测试测量不同渗透溶液的溶血量和伊红-5'马来酰亚胺染料结合测试(EMA),它与红细胞膜上的带3蛋白结合,并在遗传性球形红细胞增多症中缺乏(More等人,2020;Yamamoto et al., 2014)。两者均可通过流式细胞术完成,当两者结合使用时,可100%正确诊断遗传性球形红细胞增多症患者。在本期中,以色列Pethah Tikva Rabin医学中心的Yael Shahal-Zimra等人报道了一种更有效的渗透脆性流式细胞术检测,并将其与传统的渗透脆性和EMA检测进行了比较,以诊断遗传性球形红细胞症(Shahal-Zimra等人,2021)。他们将流式细胞术用于两种诊断方法,简化了程序,减少了样品要求,提高了准确性,并产生了更快速的结果。与蛋白尿和血尿相关的肾小球疾病可通过尿液中畸形红细胞的形态学定量诊断(Hamadah等,2018)。然而,用于表征畸形红细胞的形态学定义尚未标准化,导致难以对血尿患者进行分类。鉴别血尿起源的流式细胞术方法目前在鉴别肾小球性和非肾小球性血尿病因方面的能力有限(Scharnhorst et al., 2006)。 在这里,Awirut Charoensappakit等人描述了一种新的流式细胞术方法,研究红细胞表面磷脂酰丝氨酸表达与红细胞衍生微颗粒之间的关系。作者使用浆粒来定义尿样本中含有CD235a和附件V的大微粒,并定义红细胞及其磷脂酰丝氨酸的表达(Dave et al., 2022;Sutherland et al., 2020)。结果表明,肾小球溶血患者与非肾小球溶血患者相比,红细胞衍生微颗粒和表面磷脂酰丝氨酸表达红细胞的数量增加。作者推测这些差异与患者的病理差异有关。在肾小球溶血患者尿液中发现的红细胞必须通过受损的肾小球,使其处于剪切应力下,导致红细胞膜细胞骨架的改变,并导致表面磷脂酰丝氨酸的表达增加和红细胞衍生微颗粒的数量增加。虽然这些结果需要在更大的研究中进行评估,但如果得到证实,将大大有助于区分肾小球性和非肾小球性血尿。第六篇原创文章解决了在评估免疫刺激剂的临床试验中收集的BCT管血液样本中HLADR表达降低的问题。血液单核细胞中HLADR的表达被认为是严重损伤ICU患者免疫抑制的有力标志,并被用作临床试验的分层标准(Eksioglu-Demiralp等人,2022,Venet, 2021 #29;Payen et al., 2019)。在多中心临床试验中,已经开发出可靠的方法来测量单核细胞的HLADR,这些方法包括Quantribright珠和BCT管收集,可以将样品运送到中心位置进行评估(Quadrini等人,2021年)。然而,里昂Edouard Herriot医院的Sarah Hamada等人和法国利摩日利摩日大学的其他人在这期杂志中发现,在BCT管中收集的样本在单核细胞上的HLADR表达明显低于在EDTA中收集的样本——EDTA是一种抗凝血剂,最初用于建立免疫抑制的临界值(Hamada et al., 2021)。事实上,在他们的研究中,从大多数患者的BCT管中收集的样本低于免疫抑制的阈值,但如果在EDTA中收集,则发现高于临界值。作者警告说,有必要进行更大规模的研究,为在BCT管中收集的样本建立一个新的截止阈值。任何使用aquos进行T, B和NK细胞报告的人都会对本期的第七篇原创文章感兴趣。法国里昂爱德华赫里奥医院的lmoine et al.报告了他们开发的一种决策树,该决策树解决了大多数AQUIOS自动分析的不规则性(Lemoine et al., 2022)。此前,Degandt等人报告称,aquos CL的大量T、B和NK结果运行了“通知”,表明检测到异常的细胞分布或种群,样品要么必须重新运行,要么必须手动控制,导致他们所描述的操作员“修订疲劳”(Degandt等人,2018)。尽管在跨机构调查中,aquos显示出比其他IVD/CE批准的T, B和NK方法更好的精度和稳健性(Ticchioni等人,2019)。Lemoine等人观察了10天内收集的862个样本,证实了Degandt等人的观察。在他们的862个分析中,25.4%的人在一个或多个点图分析中出现了违规现象。这些违规行为可以分为四类,作者使用这些数据来开发决策树。应用他们的决策树,94%的AQUIOS结果无需额外的工作台工作即可发布。其余的被抑制并在常规细胞仪上运行。本期剩余的文章包括三篇致编辑信和第八篇原创文章,其中描述了使用Hoechst 33342、花生凝集素、碘化丙烯和MitoTracker Deep Red™(Gonzalez-Castro et al., 2022)评估猪精子的活力、顶体完整性和线粒体活性的四色方案。明尼苏达大学Bartosz Grzywacz等人提交的第一封致编辑信(Grzywacz et al., 2021)证实了Lyapichev等人(Lyapichev et al., 2021)关于健康人群中CD7阴性和CD26阴性人群的存在。他们进一步将这些发现扩展到自身免疫性疾病、外周血计数异常和循环克隆B细胞的患者。因此,强调缺乏CD7和/或CD26的CD4+ T细胞的存在并不是Sezary综合征和蕈样真菌病所特有的,需要通过枚举免疫表型异常的CD4+ T细胞而不是单独的CD26-或CD7-来量化Sezary综合征和蕈样真菌病。(克雷格,2021;Horna等人,2021;Illingworth et al., 2021)。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
32.40%
发文量
51
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Cytometry Part B: Clinical Cytometry features original research reports, in-depth reviews and special issues that directly relate to and palpably impact clinical flow, mass and image-based cytometry. These may include clinical and translational investigations important in the diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic management of patients. Thus, we welcome research papers from various disciplines related [but not limited to] hematopathologists, hematologists, immunologists and cell biologists with clinically relevant and innovative studies investigating individual-cell analytics and/or separations. In addition to the types of papers indicated above, we also welcome Letters to the Editor, describing case reports or important medical or technical topics relevant to our readership without the length and depth of a full original report.
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