Observations On Eosinophil Ifiltrates in The Bone Marrow Of Patients With Multiple Myeloma. Clinicopathological Correlates

Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 5338-5338
Author(s):  
Finella MC Brito-Babapulle ◽  
Tanya Cranfield ◽  
Robert B Corser ◽  
Helen Dignum ◽  
Christopher James ◽  
...  

Abstract Mouse eosinophils have been shown in 2011 to be required for the maintenance of long lasting plasma cells in the bone marrow and in maintaining the bone marrow plasma cell microenvironment. Human eosinophils have been shown by Wong et al to support multiple myeloma cell proliferation via a mechanism independent of IL6. We looked at bone marrow biopsies taken from patients who had a paraprotein and in whom a diagnosis of multiple myeloma was suspected. These samples were taken solely for the purposes of diagnosisng multiple myeloma and were retrospectively reviewed from the point of view of degree of eosinophil infiltration and its correlation with tumour load, bone lytic lesions, plasma cell morphology, whether blastic, crystalline inclusions, Mott cells, flame cells and or lymphoplasmacytoid. There were no cases of IGD or E myeloma or osteosclerotic myeloma.Nonsecretory myeloma and cases of light chain myeloma with or without amyloid were included in the series. Biopsies were not performed from osteolytic lesion unless biopsy was necessary to make a diagnosis of myeloma. Myeloma was diagnosed when plasma cell infiltrate was greater than 10% on bone marrow aspirate with a paraprotein and or lytic lesions. Eosinophil infiltration did not correlate with any of the tumour clinicopathological markers but showed an inverse correlation with degree of plasmacytosis. Eosinophils were hardly ever found in marrow aspirates that had over 70% plasma cells. They were usually found in trephine sections of bone marrow in areas where there was Grade I/II fibrosis and were often found in close proximity to focal areas of plasma cell infiltration. Whether eosinophils play a role in preventing or maintaining malignant plasma cell recurrence is currently being studied. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 4808-4808
Author(s):  
Shuang Geng ◽  
Jing Wang ◽  
Mingyi Chen ◽  
Wenming Wang ◽  
Yuhong Pang ◽  
...  

Abstract Extramedullary Plasmacytoma (EMP) is a minor yet devastating metastatic form of Multiple Myeloma (MM), shortening patients' survival from 10 years to 6 months on average. Genetic cause of EMP in MM is yet to be defined. Transcriptome difference between EMP+ patients and EMP- patients is studied here on single cell level by RNA Sequencing (RNA-Seq). We sorted CD38+CD138+ malignant plasma cells from bone marrow and peripheral blood samples by flow cytometry, then picked up single malignant plasma cell and performed single cell RNA-Seq with SmartSeq2 protocol followed by Tn5-based library preparation from bone marrow, peripheral blood and extramedullary tissue of EMP patients. From the single cell RNA-Seq results, in bone marrow we found differential gene expression between EMP+ and EMP- samples, such as CTAG2, STMN1 and RRM2. By comparing circulating malignant plasma cells in PBMC and malignant plasma cell from the sample EMP+ patient, we observed metastatic clone in blood with the same VDJ immunoglobulin heavy chain as in bone marrow. Several genes' expression of these metastatic cells are down-regulated than in bone marrow, such as PAGE2, GTSF1, DICER1. These genes may correlate with egress capability of MM cells into peripheral to become circulating plasma cells (cPCs), and EMP eventually. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 2880-2880
Author(s):  
Prashant Ramesh Tembhare ◽  
Constance Yuan ◽  
Neha Korde ◽  
Irina Maric ◽  
Katherine Calvo ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2880 Background: The percent abnormal plasma cells (aPC) as determined by flow cytometry (FC) has been shown to be an independent risk factor for progression from myeloma precursor disease (monoclonal gammopathy of uncertain significance, MGUS; smoldering multiple myeloma, SMM) to multiple myeloma (MM). However, differentiation of aPCs from normal PCs (nPCs) in these patients is challenging. MM cell lines are know to underexpress the tetraspanin proteins (e.g. CD81, CD82) in comparison to nPCs. Although CD81, a nonglycosylated tetraspanin, is robustly expressed on the surface of nPCs, little information is available regarding its expression in the aPCs of MM, SMM and MGUS. In this study we evaluate the expression of CD81 in conjunction with CD19, CD45 and CD56 in bone marrow aPCs and nPCs from patients with MM, SMM and MGUS. Methods: Bone marrow aspirates from 41 patients (9 MGUS, 22 SMM, 7 MM, 3 non-neoplastic with clinical suspicion of MGUS) were analyzed with 8-color multiparametric FC using a panel of antibodies (CD138, CD38, CD19, CD20, CD27, CD28, CD45, CD56, CD81, CD13, CD14, CD16, CD3, CD34 and intracellular kappa & lambda light chains). The pattern of surface antigen and intracellular light chain expression was utilized to determine the percent aPC (defined as monoclonal with aberrant antigen expression) and percent nPC (defined as polyclonal with normal antigen expression). In all cases the pattern of antigen expression was evaluated in the aPCs; additionally, in cases with greater than 5% nPCs (19/41 patients: 8 MGUS, 8 SMM and 3 non-neoplastic) the pattern of antigen expression was evaluated in the nPCs. The ability to detect clonal aPC by evaluation of FC pattern of antigen expression was determined and compared for CD19, CD45, CD56 and CD81. We also examined the sensitivity and specificity of the CD19 and CD81 combination verses the conventional combination of CD19, CD56 and CD45 (Perez-Persona et al, Blood 2007) for the detection of clonal aPC. Results: CD81 was strongly expressed by nPC (average mean fluorescent intensity (MFI): 11500, standard deviation (SD): 5061, range: 5347–21657) in contrast to aPC with abnormally weak expression (average MFI: 1487, SD: 887, range: 647–4311). CD81 was a highly reliable marker for the detection of clonal PC; with 90% sensitivity and 100% specificity. It was the most specific and second most sensitive marker in our study (Table 1). CD81 was equally sensitive in detection of aPCs in MGUS, SMM and MM. Evaluation of the combined pattern of expression of CD19 and CD81 resulted in 100% sensitivity and 100% specificity for detection of aPC, which is greater than the conventional combination of CD19, CD56 and CD45, yielding 100% sensitivity but 90% specificity, for diagnostic evaluation of aPC. Conclusions: CD81 is a highly reliable marker in the detection of abnormal plasma cells in MM, SMM and MGUS. The combined approach of CD19 and CD81 is superior to other conventional marker combinations (i.e. CD19, CD45, and CD56) in terms of detection of clonal plasma cells and may replace their use in the clinical evaluation of bone marrow aspirates for plasma cell processes. Furthermore, it should help widening the applicability of minimal residual disease testing in MM. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2020 ◽  
pp. jclinpath-2020-207066
Author(s):  
Jacques A J Malherbe ◽  
Kathryn A Fuller ◽  
Bob Mirzai ◽  
Bradley M Augustson ◽  
Wendy N Erber

AimsDetermination of the number of plasma cells in bone marrow biopsies is required for the diagnosis and ongoing evaluation of plasma cell neoplasms. We developed an automated digital enumeration platform to assess plasma cells identified by antigen expression in whole bone marrow sections in multiple myeloma, and compared it with manual assessments.MethodsBone marrow trephine biopsy specimens from 91 patients with multiple myeloma at diagnosis, remission and relapse were stained for CD138 and multiple myeloma oncogene 1 (MUM1). Manual assessment and digital quantification were performed for plasma cells in the entire trephine section. Concordance rates between manual and digital methods were evaluated for each antigen by intraclass correlation analyses (ICC) with associated Spearman’s correlations.ResultsThe digital platform counted 16 484–1 118 868 cells and the per cent CD138 and MUM1-positive plasma cells ranged from 0.05% to 93.5%. Overall concordance between digital and manual methods was 0.63 for CD138 and 0.89 for MUM1. Concordance was highest with diffuse plasma cell infiltrates (MUM1: ICC=0.90) and lowest when in microaggregates (CD138: ICC=0.13). Manual counts exceeded digital quantifications for both antigens (CD138: mean=26.4%; MUM1: mean=9.7%). Diagnostic or relapse threshold counts, as determined by CD138 manual assessments, were not reached with digital counting for 16 cases (18%).ConclusionsAutomated digital enumeration of the entire, immunohistochemically stained bone marrow biopsy section can accurately determine plasma cell burden, irrespective of pattern and extent of disease (as low as 0.05%). This increases precision over manual visual assessments which tend to overestimate plasma burden, especially for CD138, and when plasma cells are in clusters.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 2713-2713
Author(s):  
Cheryl H Rozanski ◽  
Jayakumar Nair ◽  
Louise Carlson ◽  
Kelvin P. Lee

Abstract The long term generation of protective antibodies (Abs) requires the continuous survival of long-lived plasma cells that are maintained within specialized bone marrow niches by complex interactions that remain largely uncharacterized. Previous studies have shown that the T cell costimulatory receptor CD28 is expressed on normal and transformed (murine plasmacytoma, human multiple myeloma) plasma cells – however, its role in the B cell lineage remained unclear. We have recently shown that CD28 expressed on transformed human plasma cells (multiple myeloma cells) directly delivers pro-survival signals to the myeloma cells and protects them against intrinsically and extrinsically induced death (Bahlis et al, 2007). Furthermore, myeloma cells directly interact with dendritic cells (DC, both in vitro and in patient bone marrow biopsies), and the DC provide the ligands (i.e. CD80 and CD86) for myeloma-CD28. Others studies utilizing competitive bone marrow reconstitution have indirectly suggest a role for CD28 in the function and/or survival of normal murine plasma cells (Delogu et al, 2006). These observations led us to directly investigate the role of CD28 in normal plasma cell survival as well as cell-cell interactions with CD80/CD86+ bone marrow derived dendritic cells (BMDC). In vitro serum starvation experiments, direct activation of CD28 by an agonistic anti-CD28 mAb increased survival of serum-starved PC by 63% (p<0.001). Addition of BMDC improved the survival of PC by 20% over that seen with media alone, and resulted in a significant increase in IgG production (p<0.01). We and others have shown that CD28 binding to CD80/CD86 on DC also “backsignals” to the DC to produce the PC survival factor IL-6. We found that co-culture with the murine plasmacytoma cell line S194 induced 155 pg/ml of IL-6 from BMDC (p<0.01 vs. BMDC alone and S194 alone), and primary plasma cells isolated from bone marrow induced 290 pg/ml of IL-6 from BMDC (p<0.001 vs. BMDC alone). Induction of BMDC production of IL-6 by both primary and transformed PC was significantly inhibited (p<0.05) by antibody blockade of CD80 and CD86. Our data demonstrates that signaling through CD28 directly supports the survival of normal bone marrow plasma cells, and that “backsignaling” through PC-CD28 engagement of DC-CD80/CD86 induces DC to secrete the pro-survival cytokine IL-6. These findings suggest that CD28 is a key molecular bridge that connect normal plasma cells to the supportive microenvironment.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 4969-4969
Author(s):  
Markus Ertmer ◽  
Djordje Atanackovic ◽  
Lucia Vankann ◽  
Stefan Wilop ◽  
Eray Gökkurt ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4969 Introduction: While multiparameter flow cytometry (MPF) is an integral part in the diagnosis, disease staging and response evaluation for hematologic malignancies such as acute leukemia or non-hodgkin-lymphoma, MPF for multiple myeloma (MM) is still mostly restricted to research studies or only performed by specialised laboratories experienced in the technique of immunophenotyping. Furthermore, the exact phenotype of malignant myeloma cells is still a matter of debate. Recently, we have identified CD229, a surface marker belonging to the family of signaling lymphocytic activation molecules (SLAM) involved in lymphocyte activation as a potential novel target for diagnosis and treatment of MM. CD229 is expressed on freshly isolated myeloma cells including their clonogenic precursors and several myeloma cell lines. In order to further validate our findings from a previous pilot study, we now analysed 151 samples from 81 patients with suspected or proven MM or monoclonal gammopathy of uncertain significance (MGUS) via MPF. Methods: Between May 2010 and May 2012, specimens (bone marrow (n=142), peripheral blood (n=10), cells from isolated plasmocytoma (n=1)) from patients (pts) with MM (n=65), plasmocytoma (n=1), MGUS (n=6), lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma (n=1) and patients with suspected MM (n=8) were simultaneously analysed via cytology and 8-colour MPF. 19 pts. were analysed at least 3 times during the course of their disease so that CD229 expression could be followed under therapy. Plasma cells were specified using surface markers CD38, CD138, CD45 and cytoplasmatic light chain restriction. Antigens analysed on plasma cells were CD19, CD28, CD33, CD56, CD81, CD117, CD200, CD221 and CD229. Results: Although plasma cell numbers determined by MPF were constantly considerably lower compared to simultaneously determined cytology results, linear regression model showed a highly significant correlation between plasma cell percentages in bone marrow measured by MPF with cytology (p<0. 0001). Plasma cell enumeration in pB also showed a strong correlative trend between cytologic and MPF results, however, due to lower numbers (n=10), this was not statistically significant (p = 0. 057). CD229 could be detected on all atypical plasma cells irrespective if they were found in MGUS or MM samples. The median of mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) of CD229 expression on plasma cells was 3, 63 (range −144. 1 – 34, 23). Median MFI on MM samples (3, 62; range −144 − 34, 23; n=131) did not differ from MFI on atypical plasma cells in pts with MGUS (3, 74, range 1. 07 – 8, 65; n=9). CD229 expression was highest on atypical plasma cells with expression of CD56 compared to CD56 negative plasma cells (p<0. 0001). This was confirmed when correlation of marker expression was evaluated. CD229 expression was clearly correlated with expression of CD56 (n=141, p = 0. 03), CD117 (n=139, p = 7E–08) and CD200 (n=140; p = 0. 03), while it was inversely correlated with expression of CD19 (n=140; p = 0. 03). Serial CD229 expression (>= twice) was determined in 39 patients. Except for three samples, where plasma cell counts became less than 1% of bone marrow cells, CD229 expression remained stable throughout the various analyses. Conclusion: While the exact function of the immunoreceptor CD229 on myeloma cells is still unknown, CD229 allows identification of atypical plasma cells by MPF. Our results show that CD229 is constantly expressed on atypical plasma cells independent of therapy and can be used in addition to other surface markers for determination of malignant plasma cell phenotype and to monitor minimal residual disease (MRD) under treatment. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 352-356
Author(s):  
GJ Ruiz-Arguelles ◽  
JA Katzmann ◽  
PR Greipp ◽  
NJ Gonchoroff ◽  
JP Garton ◽  
...  

The bone marrow and peripheral blood of 14 patients with multiple myeloma were studied with murine monoclonal antibodies that identify antigens on plasma cells (R1–3 and OKT10). Peripheral blood lymphocytes expressing plasma cell antigens were found in six cases. Five of these cases expressed the same antigens that were present on the plasma cells in the bone marrow. Patients that showed such peripheral blood involvement were found to have a larger tumor burden and higher bone marrow plasma cell proliferative activity. In some patients, antigens normally found at earlier stages of B cell differentiation (B1, B2, and J5) were expressed by peripheral blood lymphocytes and/or bone marrow plasma cells.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 4-5
Author(s):  
Lijun Yao ◽  
Reyka G Jayasinghe ◽  
Tianjiao Wang ◽  
Julie O'Neal ◽  
Ruiyang Liu ◽  
...  

Multiple myeloma (MM) is a hematological cancer of the antibody-secreting plasma cells. Despite therapeutic advancements, MM remains incurable due to high incidence of drug-resistant relapse. In recent years, targeted immunotherapies, which take advantage of the immune system's cytotoxic defenses to specifically eliminate tumor cells expressing certain cell surface and intracellular proteins have shown promise in combating this and other B cell hematologic malignancies. A major limitation in the development of these therapies lies in the discovery of optimal candidate targets, which require both high expression in tumor cells as well as stringent tissue specificity. In an effort to identify potential myeloma-specific target antigens, we performed an unbiased search for genes with specific expression in plasma and/or B cells using single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNAseq) of 53 bone marrow samples taken from 42 patients. By comparing &gt;40K plasma cells to &gt;97K immune cells across our cohort, we were able to identify a total of 181 plasma cell-associated genes, including 65 that encode cell-surface proteins and 116 encoding intracellular proteins. Of particular interest is that the plasma cells from each patient were shown to be transcriptionally distinct with unique sets of genes expressed defining each patient's malignant plasma cells. Using pathway enrichment analysis, we found significant overrepresentation of cellular processes related to B-Cell receptor (BCR) signaling, protein transport, and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, involving genes such as DERL3, HERPUD1, PDIA4, PDIA6, RRBP1, SSR3, SSR4, TXNDC5, and UBE2J1. To note, our strategy successfully captured several of the most promising MM therapeutic targets currently under pre-clinical and clinical trials, including TNFRSF17(BCMA), SLAMF7, and SDC1 (CD138). Among these, TNFRSF17 showed very high plasma cell expression, with concomitant sharp exclusion of other immune cell types. To ascertain tissue specificity of candidate genes outside of the bone marrow, we analyzed gene and protein expression data from the Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) portal and Human Protein Atlas (HPA). We found further support for several candidates (incl. TNFRSF17,SLAMF7, TNFRSF13B (TACI), and TNFRSF13C) as being both exclusively and highly expressed in lymphoid tissues. While several surface candidates were not found to be lymphocyte-restricted at the protein level, they remain relevant considerations as secondary targets for bi-specific immunotherapy approaches currently under development. To further investigate potential combinatorial targeting, we examine sample-level patterns of candidate co-expression and mutually-exclusive expression using correlation analysis. As the majority of our detected plasma cell-specific genes encode intracellular proteins, we investigated the potential utility of these epitopes as therapeutic targets via MHC presentation. Highly expressed candidates include MZB1, SEC11C, HLA-DOB, POU2AF1, and EAF2. We analyzed protein sequences using NetMHC and NETMHCII to predict high-affinity peptides for common class-I and class-II HLA alleles. To correlate MHC allelic preference with candidate expression in our cohort, we performed HLA-typing for 29 samples using Optitype. To support our scRNAseq-driven findings, we cross-referenced gene expression data with 907 bulk RNA-sequencing samples, including 15 from internal studies and 892 from the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation (MMRF), as well as bulk global proteomics data from 4 MM cell lines (TIB.U266, RPMI8226, OPM2, MM1ST) and 4 patients. We see consistent trends across both cohorts, with high positive correlation (Pearson R ranging between 0.60 and 0.99) for a majority of genes when comparing scRNA and bulk RNA expression in the same samples. Our experimental design and analysis strategies enabled the efficient discovery of myeloma-associated therapeutic target candidates. In conclusion, this study identified a set of promising myeloma CAR-T targets, providing novel treatment options for myeloma patients. Disclosures Goldsmith: Wugen Inc.: Consultancy. DiPersio:Magenta Therapeutics: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 34-35
Author(s):  
Manasi M. Godbole ◽  
Peter A. Kouides

Introduction: Most studies on the diagnostic yield of bone marrow biopsy including the one by Hot et al. have focused on the yield of bone marrow biopsies in diagnosing the source of fever of unknown origin. However, there have not been any studies performed to our knowledge looking at overall practice patterns and yield of bone marrow biopsies for diagnoses other than fever of unknown origin. We aim to determine the most common indications for performing bone marrow biopsies in a community-based teaching hospital as well as the yield of the biopsies in patients with specified and unspecified pre-test indications to estimate the rate of uncertain post-test diagnoses. Methods: We performed a retrospective data collection study at Rochester General Hospital, NY. A comprehensive search was conducted in our electronic medical data to identify all patients who underwent bone marrow biopsies over a 5 year period from January 2011 - December 2016 for indications other than fever of unknown origin. Patient data including demographics, pre-bone marrow biopsy diagnosis and post-bone marrow diagnosis was obtained. All patients above the age of 18 who underwent bone marrow biopsy for indications other than fever of unknown origin or follow up treatment of a hematological malignancy were included. Results: A total of 223 biopsies were performed. The median age was 59 years (age range- 23-95). One hundred and sixteen patients were male and 107 were female. The most common indications for performing bone marrow biopsy were evaluation of the following possible conditions: multiple myeloma (n=54), myelodysplastic syndrome [MDS] (n=47), lymphoma (n=28) and leukemia (n=18) as well as non-specific indications such as pancytopenia (n=40), anemia (n=22) and thrombocytopenia (n=11). The proportion of cases confirmed by bone marrow biopsy was 45/54 (83%) with the pre-marrow diagnosis of multiple myeloma, 34/47 cases (72%) with the pre-marrow diagnosis of MDS, 15/18 (83%) with the pre-marrow diagnosis of leukemia and 13/28 (46%) in those with the pre-marrow diagnosis of rule out lymphoma. Thirteen cases (18%) with possible MDS had post-bone marrow diagnoses of leukemia, anemia of chronic disease, myelofibrosis or medication-related changes. Five out of twenty two cases (23%) for anemia and 3/11 cases (27%) for thrombocytopenia without otherwise specified pre-bone marrow etiology had uncertain diagnosis after bone marrow biopsy. Conclusion: In about a fifth of patients necessitating a bone marrow, the diagnosis is discordant and can be surprising. It is also worth reporting that in these discordant results, non-hematological causes such as medications, anemia due to chronic diseases or conditions such as cirrhosis or splenomegaly from other etiologies were among the final diagnoses. Interestingly, 20% of the patients with unspecified pre-bone marrow diagnoses such as anemia or thrombocytopenia in our study had an unclear post-bone marrow diagnosis despite undergoing bone marrow biopsy. Our findings are a reminder that the bone marrow exam does not always lead to a definitive diagnosis and the need by exclusion to include in the differential non-hematological etiologies such as nutritional deficiencies, chronic kidney disease or autoimmune disorders. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 20190025
Author(s):  
Margaret Mwania ◽  
Naushad Karim ◽  
Sarah Wambui ◽  
Shamshudin Mohammedali ◽  
Allan Njau

Plasma cell myeloma is a bone marrow disorder characterized by neoplastic proliferation of plasma cells within the bone marrow replacing normal cells. We present a case report of a 25-year-old female with bilateral lower and upper limb pains. She had been seen in various health facilities for the past 2 years with progressively worsening disability. Skeletal survey revealed multiple osteolytic lesions in the appendicular skeleton resembling vanishing bone syndrome. Ultrasound-guided biopsy was done with histological diagnosis of plasma cell myeloma. This case is unique because of the young age at presentation, HIV seropositive status and atypical appearance of the lesions.


2017 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 142-145
Author(s):  
Bimal K Agrawal ◽  
Anshul Sehgal ◽  
Vikas Deswal ◽  
Prem Singh ◽  
Usha Agrawal

Multiple myeloma is a neoplasm of plasma cells in the bone marrow. It is characterised by lytic lesions in the bones, marrow plasmacytosis and presence of M protein in serum and/or urine. Serum ?2 microglobulin is also raised and can be used for classification and prognostication of the disease. In the absence of M protein, the disease is known as non-secretory myeloma. It is proposed that raised ?2 microglobulin can be used for diagnosis and therapeutic guidance in the absence of M protein. A rare case of nonsecretory myeloma with neurocognitive impairment along with review of literature is being presented. The patient had multiple lytic lesions in bones with marked increase in plasma cells in bone marrow. M protein was not detectable in serum or urine but serum ?2 microglobulin was much elevated.Bangladesh Journal of Medical Science Vol.16(1) 2017 p.142-145


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