Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria Assessment by Flow Cytometric Analysis

2017 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 855-867 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mike Keeney ◽  
Andrea Illingworth ◽  
D. Robert Sutherland
Medicine ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. 193-207 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun-Ichi Nishimura ◽  
Yuzuru Kanakura ◽  
Russell E. Ware ◽  
Tsutomu Shichishima ◽  
Hideki Nakakuma ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 81 (7) ◽  
pp. 1855-1862 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Shichishima ◽  
T Terasawa ◽  
C Hashimoto ◽  
H Ohto ◽  
M Takahashi ◽  
...  

We performed a flow cytometric analysis using monoclonal antibodies to decay accelerating factor (DAF) and CD59/membrane attack complex inhibitory factor (CD59/MACIF) in order to investigate the leukemic cells and erythrocytes from a patient with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) who developed acute myelocytic leukemia. In May 1990, the leukemic cells comprised 70% of the mononuclear cells in the bone marrow and 76% of those in the peripheral blood. They consisted of a mixture of positive and negative populations, including single DAF- positive cells. In August 1990, almost 100% of the peripheral mononuclear cells were leukemic blasts, and these consisted of a single population with reduced DAF expression. Single-color flow cytometric analysis showed that the leukemic cells lacked CD59/MACIF, while control leukemic cells (n = 3) expressed both DAF and CD59/MACIF. Leukemic blasts from this patient and six control patients expressed lymphocyte function-associated antigen 3 and FcIII receptors (CD 16) both before and after treatment with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. The patient's erythrocytes lacking DAF and CD59/MACIF expression corresponded to the proportion of complement-sensitive cells at the onset of acute leukemia. These DAF- and CD59/MACIF-deficient erythrocytes disappeared almost completely with progression of the leukemia. In conclusion, it appears that the expression of glycosylphosphatidylinositol-linked membrane proteins by leukemic cells was heterogeneous and discordant in our patient, and that the leukemic cells were derived from the PNH clone because of their deficiency of CD59/MACIF. It is also suggested that DAF could compete more effectively than CD59/MACIF for a limited number of anchor molecules available on the proliferating leukemic cells.


TH Open ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 04 (01) ◽  
pp. e36-e39
Author(s):  
Christina Griesser ◽  
Michael Myskiw ◽  
Werner Streif

AbstractParoxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) is a chronic disease caused by complement-mediated hemolysis. Clinical symptoms include intravascular hemolysis, nocturnal hemoglobinuria, thromboses, cytopenia, fatigue, abdominal pain, and a strong tendency toward bone marrow failure. It is a rare disease, especially in children, with high mortality rates without appropriate treatment.We here present the case of a 17-year-old girl with unprovoked muscle vein thrombosis. Flow cytometric analysis showed deficiency of glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-anchored membrane proteins on all three hematopoietic cell lines and confirmed the diagnosis of PNH. Treatment with the monoclonal antibody eculizumab achieved long-term remission.As flow cytometry is normally not part of the routine diagnostics for pediatric thrombosis, awareness is crucial and PNH is important to consider in all children with thrombosis at atypical sites and abnormalities in blood counts with regard to hemolysis and cytopenia.


2006 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 82-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shoko Sato ◽  
Yuichi Hasegawa ◽  
Toshiro Nagasawa ◽  
Haruhiko Ninomiya

Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 4581-4581
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Kern ◽  
Claudia Haferlach ◽  
Susanne Schnittger ◽  
Torsten Haferlach

Abstract Evaluation of patients with peripheral blood cytopenias includes bone marrow assessment by cytomorphology and cytogenetics for findings suggestive of a myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) or proving this diagnosis. While multiparameter flow cytometry (MFC) may increasingly add diagnostic information regarding MDS, MFC is the essential method for the assessment of an important differential diagnosis, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH). Furthermore, it has been suggested by the International PNH Interest Group to screen patients with MDS once yearly for the presence of PNH clones irrespective of the occurrence of hemolysis. While the flow cytometric analysis for PNH has been based for decades on the detection of GPI-anchored surface antigens the methodological spectrum has been broadened recently by the introduction of FLAER (Protox Biotech, Victoria, BC) which is a fluorochrome-conjugated, mutated and inactivated derivative of the bacterial toxin, aerolysin. It directly binds to the GPI moiety of GPI-linked structures and has been shown to reproducibly detect even small amounts of cells from PNH clones at less than 1%. In order to assess the diagnostic value of FLAER in screening patients with cytopenia and suspected MDS for PNH we applied FLAER in parallel to the standard evaluation for PNH as well as for MDS. Of 29 patients analyzed 10 were diagnosed by cytomorpholgy as having MDS, 5 as possible MDS, 2 as chronic myelomonocytic leukemia, 4 as acute myeloid leukemia (AML), 5 as reactive conditions, 1 as aplastic anemia, 1 as toxic cytopenia following chemotherapy, and 1 was not evaluable. The evaluation for PNH included the assessment of CD55 and CD59 on erythrocytes, granulocytes and monocytes as well as of CD16 on granulocytes and of CD14 on monocytes. In addition, FLAER was used to analyze granulocytes and monocytes. In three PNH cases analyzed as controls both conventional markers as well as FLAER clearly demonstrated the affected populations. While the assessment of CD55, CD59, CD16, and CD14 did not reveal a sign suggestive of PNH in any of the 29 patients there were 7 patients in whom a reduced signal for FLAER was found in a portion of the granulocytes. This portion ranged from 10% to 29% of all granulocytes. Similar findings, although less striking, were obtained in monocytes. Interestingly, all of these 7 cases, with the exception of the case not evaluable by cytomorphology, had a diagnosis of either MDS or AML (aberrant karyotype in 4/7) and no aberrant signal for FLAER was found in patients with non-malignant diagnoses. These data suggest that by applying FLAER GPI-deficient cells and thereby PNH-clones may be detected in patients with MDS and AML. It remains to be proven, however, which diagnostic significance is carried by FLAER in the absence of findings by conventional markers suggestive of PNH. Further studies are warranted to assess the clinical utility of adding FLAER to the standard diagnostic panel for PNH, particularly in the setting of patients diagnosed with MDS.


Blood ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 81 (7) ◽  
pp. 1855-1862 ◽  
Author(s):  
T Shichishima ◽  
T Terasawa ◽  
C Hashimoto ◽  
H Ohto ◽  
M Takahashi ◽  
...  

Abstract We performed a flow cytometric analysis using monoclonal antibodies to decay accelerating factor (DAF) and CD59/membrane attack complex inhibitory factor (CD59/MACIF) in order to investigate the leukemic cells and erythrocytes from a patient with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) who developed acute myelocytic leukemia. In May 1990, the leukemic cells comprised 70% of the mononuclear cells in the bone marrow and 76% of those in the peripheral blood. They consisted of a mixture of positive and negative populations, including single DAF- positive cells. In August 1990, almost 100% of the peripheral mononuclear cells were leukemic blasts, and these consisted of a single population with reduced DAF expression. Single-color flow cytometric analysis showed that the leukemic cells lacked CD59/MACIF, while control leukemic cells (n = 3) expressed both DAF and CD59/MACIF. Leukemic blasts from this patient and six control patients expressed lymphocyte function-associated antigen 3 and FcIII receptors (CD 16) both before and after treatment with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. The patient's erythrocytes lacking DAF and CD59/MACIF expression corresponded to the proportion of complement-sensitive cells at the onset of acute leukemia. These DAF- and CD59/MACIF-deficient erythrocytes disappeared almost completely with progression of the leukemia. In conclusion, it appears that the expression of glycosylphosphatidylinositol-linked membrane proteins by leukemic cells was heterogeneous and discordant in our patient, and that the leukemic cells were derived from the PNH clone because of their deficiency of CD59/MACIF. It is also suggested that DAF could compete more effectively than CD59/MACIF for a limited number of anchor molecules available on the proliferating leukemic cells.


Blood ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 79 (7) ◽  
pp. 1842-1845
Author(s):  
S Fujioka ◽  
T Yamada

Three populations of erythrocytes have been shown by flow cytometric analysis on complement regulatory proteins: CD59 and decay-accelerating factor (DAF) on erythrocytes in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH). CD59 and DAF in PNH may be completely deficient in CD59- and DAF- negative erythrocytes, they may be decreased varyingly in partly positive erythrocytes, and they may be approximately normal in almost normal positive erythrocytes. Control erythrocytes are always CD59- and DAF-normal positive. CD59- and DAF-negative erythrocytes have been shown to be most sensitive to complement lysis in vitro. However, it has not yet been elucidated whether CD59- and DAF-almost normal positive and partly positive erythrocytes in a patient have a longer in vivo survival than negative erythrocytes. Blood from controls and PNH patients was separated in five fractions by differential centrifugation. CD59 and DAF on the fractionated erythrocytes were determined by flow cytometry using specific antibodies. Ratios of CD59- and DAF-almost normal positive and partly positive cells to negative erythrocytes were increased progressively from the top fraction to the bottom. The erythrocytes in the top fraction are younger and reticulocyte-rich, while those in the bottom are older and reticulocyte- poor. Hence, the present results indicate that CD59- and DAF-partly positive erythrocytes as well as almost normal positive erythrocytes in patients may have a longer in vivo survival than negative erythrocytes.


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