scholarly journals A Case of Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cell Leukemia

2013 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 111-114
Author(s):  
Judit Beáta Köpeczi ◽  
I Benedek ◽  
Erzsébet Benedek ◽  
Enikő Kakucs ◽  
Aliz Tunyogi ◽  
...  

AbstractIntroduction: Plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia is a rare subtype of acute leukemia, which has recently been established as a distinct pathologic entity that typically follows a highly aggressive clinical course in adults. The aim of this report is to present a case of plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia due to its rarity and difficulty to recognize and diagnose it.Case report: We present a case of a 67 year-old man who presented multiple subcutaneous lesions on his face, neck, chest and upper extremities with reddish-brown, brown colour. In the bone marrow aspirate 83% of the blast cells were found. Immunophenotypically the blasts were positive for CD4, CD56, CD123 (high intensity), CD36, CD22, CD10 (10.42%), CD33, HLA-DR, CD7 (9.24%), CD38 (34.8%) and negative for CD13, CD64, CD14, CD16, CD15, CD11b, CD11c, CD3, CD5, CD2, CD8, CD19, CD20, CD34. The skin biopsy showed lymphohistiocytoid infiltration in the dermis. The patient was diagnosed with acute plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia and received polychemotherapy with rapid response of skin lesions and blastic infiltration of the bone marrow. After 3 courses of polychemotherapy the cutaneous lesions reappeared and multiplied. The blast infiltration in the bone marrow increased to 70%. A more aggressive polychemotherapy regimen was administered, but the patient presented serious complications (febrile neutropenia) and died in septic shock 8 months after the initiation of treatment.Conclusions: Immunophenotyping of blasts cells is indispensable in the diagnosis of plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia. The CD4+, CD56+, lin-, CD123 ++high, CD11c-, CD36+, HLA-DR+, CD34-, CD45+ low profile is highly suggestive for pDCL. The outcome of plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia is poor. Despite the high rate of initial response to treatment, early relapses occur and the patients die of disease progression.

2016 ◽  
Vol 23 (7) ◽  
pp. 552-556 ◽  
Author(s):  
Varinder Kaur ◽  
Arjun Swami ◽  
Atrash Shebli ◽  
Sara Shalin ◽  
Muthu Veeraputhiran ◽  
...  

Blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm is rare myeloid malignancy clinically characterized by non-pruritic, violaceous and papulo-nodular skin lesions, together with bone marrow and lymph node involvement. Histologically, there is infiltration of dermis by neoplastic mono-nuclear CD4, CD56, CD123 co-expressing cells with epidermal sparing. Most commonly blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm presents as a de-novo condition, and treatment-related blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm is a rare phenomenon. Due to rarity of the disease, there is no established standard of care treatment. Both acute myeloid leukemia and acute lymphoid leukemia type induction regimens have been used for treatment of blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm, with initial response rate of 50%–80%. We present a rare case of therapy-associated blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm in a patient with remote history alkylating agent systemic therapy. A lag period of five to seven years and presence of deletion 7q.31 seen in bone marrow biopsy specimen in our patient are consistent with a likely therapy-associated etiology of his blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 57-62
Author(s):  
Vlad Andrei Cianga ◽  
Cătălin Doru Dănăilă ◽  
Ion Antohe

Blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasms (BPDCNs) are extremely rare and aggressive hematological malignancies that derive from precursors of plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) and frequently involve skin lesions and bone marrow infiltration. They mostly affect the elderly population and the prognosis is poor with the therapeutic choices currently available. Diagnosis is made with the help of tools such as immuno-histochemistry and flow cytometry. Here, we present a particular case of BPDCN with a positive FLT3-D835 mutation and we discuss the possible impact this may have on the evolution of the disease and response to treatment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 60-67
Author(s):  
I. A. Demina ◽  
S. A. Kashpor ◽  
O. I. Illarionova ◽  
M. E. Dubrovina ◽  
A. A. Dudorova ◽  
...  

The diagnosis of rare hematological disorders requires a comprehensive clinical and laboratory investigation with careful interpretation of all test results. Blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm (BPDCN) is one of such rare entities. We have performed a retrospective analysis of the results of immunophenotyping, cytomorphology and cytogenetics of bone marrow tumor cells from 5 patients with BPDCN aged from 8 to 51 years. The study was approved by the Independent Ethics Committee of the Dmitry Rogachev National Medical Research Center of Pediatric Hematology, Oncology and Immunology. No specific characteristics of blasts were found. No correlation with the treatment and outcomes was noted as well: 3 patients died of progression or relapse (2 and 1, respectively). Bone marrow immunophenotyping is probably the most valuable laboratory test which allows physicians to establish the proper diagnosis in the absence of skin lesions. Flow cytometry immunophenotyping is the only technique used to determine the antigen profile that enables us to distinguish normal plasmacytoid dendritic cells from tumor ones by the presence (or absence) of the expression of CD2, CD7, CD38, CD56, CD303 etc. In the present paper, we provide a detailed description of five cases of BPDCN and main methods for flow cytometry data analysis. The parents of the patients agreed to use the information, including photos of children, in scientific research and publications.


2009 ◽  
Vol 14 (12) ◽  
pp. 1205-1208 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristina Tecchio ◽  
Chiara Colato ◽  
Massimiliano Bonifacio ◽  
Mauro Krampera ◽  
Sergio Maluta ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 4251-4251
Author(s):  
Alex F. Sandes ◽  
Rodrigo S. Barroso ◽  
Eliza Y.S. Kimura ◽  
Mihoko Yamamoto

Abstract Plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia (pDCL) is a rare hematological malignancy, characterized by the expression of CD123hi, CD4+, CD56+ and absence of myeloid or lymphoid markers. Patients usually have an aggressive clinical course, short survival and increased rates of relapse after chemotherapy. We report the clinical, biological, phenotypic features of three cases of pDCL and their multidrug resistance profile (MDR) and FLT3 internal tandem duplication (FLT3-ITD) status. Methods and Results: we reanalyzed 193 patients with acute leukemia, studied at the laboratory of Cellular Biology and Flow Cytometry at diagnosis, between 2002 and 2006. Among them three patients presented imunnophenotypic features of dendritic cell malignancy. At diagnosis, patients (2M/1F, aged 63, 64 and 74 y) presented anemia, thrombocytopenia and the WBC count was 6.7, 12.6 and 45.1×109/L, with circulating blast cells in two cases (69% and 80%). Bone marrow blasts showed L2/M0 (one case) or monocytoid morphology (2 cases). Lymph nodes enlargement and splenomegaly in one case and cutaneous lesions in one other case were observed. Multiparametric flow cytometry using a large panel of monoclonal antibodies showed the presence of CD123hi, CD4, HLA-DR and CD45dim in all cases, CD56 in two and the absence of any lineage-associated markers expression (CD13-, CD117-, CD15-, CD14-, CD64-, MPO-, CD41-, CD3-, CD19-, CD16-). Karyotype was available in one patient and it was normal. MDR was studied on leukemic cells by Rhodamine 123 efflux test in the presence/absence of Verapamil, using flow cytometry. All three cases showed increased rates of functional drug efflux. The FLT3-ITD was assessed by polymerase chain reaction in mononuclear cells DNA using the following primers: 14F (GCAATTTAGGTATGAAAGCAGC) and 15R (CTTTCAGCATTTTGACGGCAACC) and it was negative in all patients. Two patients were submitted to chemotherapy (BFM-ALL-5/93 protocol in one and Idarubicin + Cytarabine in another). One patient was resistant to IDA+ Cytarabine and the other died 20 days after BFM protocol induction by infection. The untreated patient died one month later. Discussion To our knowledge, these are the first cases of dendritic cell malignancies where the MDR functional expression and FLT3-ITD status were evaluated. Additionally, they are the first Brazilian cases of pDCL reported. None of the patients presented the FLT3-ITD; moreover a recent study (Dijkman R et al, Blood, 2007) of gene expression profile using microarray demonstrated that FLT3 mRNA was upregulated on pDCL. Our results suggest that the expression of MDR might contribute to the adverse outcome in this rare entity and to the poor response to chemotherapy described by others. Literature data suggest intensive treatment with bone marrow transplantation for pDCL but the addition of MDR-modulators to the chemotherapy schedules might be useful for the management of this disorder, especially in elderly patients.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 4703-4703
Author(s):  
Paola Carluccio ◽  
Mario Delia ◽  
Anna Mestice ◽  
Domenico Pastore ◽  
Alessandra Ricco ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4703 The World Health Organization (WHO) recently published a revised, updated edition of the WHO Classification of Tumours of the Haematopoietic and Lymphoid Tissues, including new criteria for the recognition of some previously described neoplasms as well as clarification and refinement of the defining criteria for others. It also adds entities – some defined mainly by genetic and immunophenotypic features – that have only recently been characterized. Particularly, the diagnosis and classification of acute leukemias of ambiguous lineage is debated; among these: “blastic NK-cell lymphoma” and “agranular CD4+/CD56+ hematodermic neoplasms”. Both of them are now known to be, in virtually all cases, a tumor derived from precursors of a specialized subset of dendritic cells, plasmacytoid dendritic cells, and so are myeloid-related neoplasms defined as blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm (BPDCN). This is a clinically aggressive neoplasm that is usually characterized at onset by solitary or multiple skin lesions, often with associated regional lymphadenopathy, and frequently by involvement of the PB and BM. Leukemic cells show submembranous cytoplasmic vacuoles and pseudopodia-like extensions of agranular cytoplasm. The blasts in such cases do not express myeloperoxidase or nonspecific esterase, and are characterized by the expression of CD4, CD43, CD56, CD123, BDCA-2/CD303, TCL1, and CLA; CD7 and CD33 are not uncommonly expressed as well, and TdT is expressed in about 30% of cases. There is no expression of CD34 or CD117. Here we report three cases with clinical data, cytological and immunophenotypic findings strongly suggesting the diagnosis of BPDCN. Case 1 An 80 year-old-man was admitted to our institution on December 2006. He referred the occurrence of skin lesions since January 2005, when a diagnosis of extranodal B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma was made and treatment with conventional chemotherapy was performed, but without achieving any response. At our evaluation he presented leukocytosis (144 × 109/L) associated with purplish, firm nodules on the trunk, arms and face. Peripheral blood and bone marrow aspirate showed the presence of blast cells with a lymphoid appearance, granular periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) positivity and a high expression of CD33, CD4, and CD56. He was treated with AML-like therapy, but died of disease progression. Case 2 A 79-year old woman was admitted in December 2006 with a 2-month history of anemia, splenomegaly, and weight loss of 10 kg in the last year. Laboratory tests were as follows: Hb, 41 g/L; leukocytes, 2.5 × 109/L (with 10% of blast cells); platelets, 43 × 109/L. No lymphadenopathy or skin lesions were present. Bone marrow examination revealed 41% of small to medium-sized blast cells without Auer rods or granula and negative reactivity to myeloperoxidase, esterase and PAS. She was treated with an AML-like protocol; she achieved partial response, but died after three months, of disease progression. Case 3 A 69-year-old man was admitted to our Institution for cytopenia in June 2009. He referred the occurrence of brownish-purple firm nodules on the trunk since April 2009. At our evaluation he presented pancytopenia; bone marrow aspiration was performed and revealed infiltration by 65% of blasts with reticulated chromatin, evident nucleoli, a vacuolated cytoplasm and pseudopodia-like expansions. The blasts were negative for myeloperoxidase, monocyte esterase and PAS staining. Skin biopsy revealed a dermal infiltration by the same blastic-cell BM population. He underwent AML-like therapy and, although the skin lesions disappeared, 30% blastic bone marrow infiltration persisted. Morphological revision of these cases, selected for their peculiar immunophenotype reported in the following Table, revealed the same cytological features and cytochemical reactivity in cases 2 and 3; case 1 had a lymphoblastic-like morphology and showed PAS positivity, but the lack of cCD3 was not consistent with the diagnosis of ALL. All the cases were FLT3-ITD+. We suggest that a correct modern panel of MoAb with a careful morphological examination could help to pose the diagnosis of BPDCN, which typically affects older patients and is characterized by poor prognosis. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 2365-2365 ◽  
Author(s):  
Uday Deotare ◽  
Elizabeth Hyjek ◽  
Anna Porwit ◽  
Rumina Musani ◽  
David Barth ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Although classified by WHO 2008 as belonging to the category “Acute myeloid leukemia and related precursor neoplasms”, Blastic Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cell Neoplasm (BPDCN) presents as an acute leukemia (AL) only in a minority of cases. There are only few studies describing the comprehensive immunophenotypic pattern of BPDCN in the bone marrow. Furthermore, given the rarity of this hematologic malignancy optimal frontline therapy is unclear. Patients and Methods: This retrospective analysis evaluates the diagnostic flow cytometry pattern and outcome of 9 patients who were diagnosed with BPDCN at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre between December 2008 and June 2014. A four tube 10-color flow cytometry (FCM) panel has been used to correctly make the diagnosis of BPDCN in 6 patients, whereas a 5-colour panel was used in the remaining patients in conjunction with immunohistochemistry. The following markers were included in the10-color panel: Tube 1: CD65 FITC, CD13 PE, CD14 ECD, CD33 PC5.5, CD34 PC7, CD117 APC, CD7 A700, CD11b A750, CD16 PB, and CD45 KO; Tube 2: CD36 FITC, CD64 PE, CD56 ECD, CD33 PC5.5, CD34 PC7, CD123 APC, CD19 A700, CD38 A750, HLA-DR PB, and CD45 KO; Tube 3: CD71 FITC, CD11c PE, CD4 ECD, CD33 PC5.5, CD34 PC7, CD2 APC, CD10 A700, CD235a A750, CD15 PB, and CD45 KO; Tube 4:nuclear (n) TdT FITC, cytoplasmic (cyt.) MPO PE, CD14 ECD, CD33 PC5.5, CD34 PC7, cyt.CD79a APC, cyt.CD22 A700, CD19 A750, cyt.CD3 PB, and CD45 KO. Results: Median age was 66 years (range, 25 to 91 years); 3 patients were over the age of 70 years. Fifty-six percent were males. All presented with skin lesions and 78% presented each with lymphadenopathy and bone marrow involvement. Cytogenetics were poor-risk in 2 patients, intermediate-risk in 3 and unknown or inconclusive in 4. By 10-color FCM, leukemic cells were in the blast gate (CD45dim/low SSC) and were positive for CD4(bright), CD33(dim), CD56(heterogenous), CD123(bright), CD36, CD38, HLA-DR, CD71, but negative for CD10, CD11b, CD13, CD14, CD15, CD16, CD19, CD34, CD64, CD65, CD235a. Other markers, such as cyt.MPO, cyt.CD3, cyt.CD22 and nTdT were negative, while dim cyt.CD79a was seen in 3 cases. CD7 expression was found in 5 cases, whereas CD2 and CD117 were found in single cases only. BM involvement by BPDCN leukemic cells ranged from 27% to 92% of the marrow cellularity. Skin involvement showed dense infiltrate of cells with blastoid morphology and characteristic grenz zone. Seven patients received front-line induction therapy with HyperCVAD with an overall response rate of 86% (4 complete remissions (CR), 2 unconfirmed CRs). One patient died of multi-organ failure during induction. Three of 6 responders underwent planned allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT); 1 patient has since died of acute graft versus host disease (GVHD), whereas 2 are alive in remission with chronic GVHD, 12 and 14 months post transplant with complete donor chimerism. One transplant ineligible patient relapsed 22 months after achievement of CR1. Median follow-up of all patients was 12 months with a overall survival at 1 year of 59.3% for the entire group. Patients who underwent allogeneic HCT had overall survival at 1 year of 66.7% and for the chemotherapy group was 27.8% at 1 year.(p=0.34). Conclusion: An accurate diagnosis of BPDCN can be made by 10-colour FCM using a 4-tube acute leukemia panel. BPDCN demonstrates a characteristic pattern of antigen expression . Although front-line induction chemotherapy with HyperCVAD can yield high CR rates, allogeneic HCT should be performed in first CR for transplant eligible patients, as this appears to be required for long term durable remissions. For transplant ineligible or relapsed BPDCN patients, there is an unmet need for novel therapeutic agents. Disclosures Porwit: Beckman-Coulter: Speakers Bureau. Gupta:Novartis: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Incyte Corporation: Consultancy, Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 3899-3899
Author(s):  
Hannah Beird ◽  
Maliha Khan ◽  
Feng Wang ◽  
Mansour Alfayez ◽  
Tianyu Cai ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm (BPDCN) is a rare hematologic neoplasm involving skin lesions and disseminated disease into bone marrow, peripheral blood, and lymph nodes, characterized by poor clinical outcomes and no standard therapeutic approaches. BPDCN is characterized by the malignant proliferation of precursor plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs). It is now classified by WHO 2016 as a separate entity under myeloid malignancies owing to its unique clinico-pathologic nature, greater understanding of its distinct clinical course, but with some noted clinical, morphologic, and molecular similarities to AML and myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). One of the most common molecular mutations observed by next-generation sequencing in the vast majority of patients with BPDCN has been the presence of TET2 mutations and variants. Notably, somatic missense and truncating mutations in TET2 have been reported in patients with both BPDCN and AML, yet their differential responses to similar therapeutic regimens in clinical trial testing indicates that there are likely key underlying etiologies that are yet to be determined. Aims: We sought to investigate and identify critical differences between patients with BPDCN and AML at the molecular level, utilizing a series of advanced analyses including transcriptome microarray, serum multiplex immunoassays and cytokine analysis. Methods: In order to discern these differences, we profiled bone marrow, peripheral blood and serum samples from primary patients samples with BPDCN (N = 16) and TET2-mutated AML (AMLTET2m) (N = 9) using 3 different assays. We first ascertained somatic point mutations and copy number alterations of 300 genes in our BPDCN specimens using an in-house hematologic malignancy panel ("T300" panel). Next, we confirmed the prevalence of compound truncating TET2 mutations in patients with BPDCN and few copy number alterations in the genes profiled. We then used the transcriptome microarray (ThermoFisher Scientific ClariomTM D Pico Assay, and serum multiplex immunoassays (Cytokine/Chemokine/Growth Factor 45-Plex Human ProcartaPlex™ Panel 1 (ThermoFisher Scientific, formerly Affymetrix) with the addition of IL-3 Human ProcartaPlex™ Simplex Kit, formerly Affymetrix) to compare BPDCN specimens against those from TET2-mutated AML patients. Results: With the microarray analysis, we found 920 genes to be up-regulated and 791 genes down-regulated in BPDCN specimens as compared to AMLTET2m. We corroborated known differentially expressed marker genes: higher levels of IL3Ra and TCL1A and lower levels of MPO in BPDCN as compared to AMLTET2m specimens. Genes specific to dendritic cells (PTPRS, LTK, LAMP5) were highly expressed in BPDCN than in AMLTET2m specimens. Of interest, two of these genes, PTPRS and LTK, provide possible links to the skin lesions as PTPRS is implicated in the progression of melanoma and LTK is involved in pigmentation of melanocytes. The serum cytokine profile analysis showed significantly elevated levels of eotaxin and RANTES in the BPDCN cohort as compared to the AMLTET2m cohort (Figure 1a,b). Both of these are implicated in allergic and autoimmune reactions by behaving as eosinophil chemo-attractants. Along with the higher levels of PTPRS and dendritic nature of the tumor cells, these findings suggest a possible autoimmune background which exists in the context of disease. Conclusions: In this novel analysis, we observed elevated levels of eotaxin and RANTES in patients with BPDCN as compared to AMLTET2m. These findings may represent an important aspect of pDC functioning even outside of BPDCN, as pDCs may contribute to the pathogenesis of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), an autoimmune disorder with hallmark cutaneous lesions. Moreover, autoimmune pathologies have been hypothesized to damage the bone marrow and induce destruction of myeloid precursor cells. This may incorporate some of the dendritic cell nature since in its natural context, as pDCs serve to recognize foreign particles such as viruses and synthetic oligonucleotides through Toll-like Receptors TLR7/9. These findings suggest that further study into these markers are warranted in patients with BPDCN. Figure 1. Differential serum cytokine levels between BPDCN and AMLTET2m (a) Eotaxin (pg/mL), Wilcox rank test P < 0.01 (b) RANTES (pg/mL), Wilcox rank test P < 0.05. Disclosures Konopleva: Stemline Therapeutics: Research Funding. Pemmaraju:stemline: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; plexxikon: Research Funding; SagerStrong Foundation: Research Funding; daiichi sankyo: Research Funding; celgene: Consultancy, Honoraria; Affymetrix: Research Funding; samus: Research Funding; cellectis: Research Funding; abbvie: Research Funding; novartis: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 4966-4966
Author(s):  
Takao Deguchi ◽  
Nobutaka Kiyokawa ◽  
Yoshiko Hashii ◽  
Akiko M. Saito ◽  
Atsushi Manabe ◽  
...  

Abstract [Background] According to the nation-wide retrospective study for pediatric leukemia phenotyping, immunological diagnostic committee of Japanese Pediatric Leukemia/Lymphoma Study Group (JPLSG) established diagnostic criteria and panel to pediatric hematological malignancies in 2008. Then Nation-wide standardized central immnophenotyping in Japan was started from 2011, and done in more than 2,500 cases by the end of 2014. Most cases were determined immunological diagnosis, but it was of note that we found 11 acute unclassified leukemia cases, including typical and atypical blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasms (BPDCN). BPDCN is a rare subtype of leukemia/lymphoma, which has been categorized in the 2008 World Health Organization (WHO) classification of hematological diseases under acute myeloid leukemia and related precursor neoplasms. It was well known for high incidence of extra medullary regions. Most cases of BPDCN were found in elder people, so pediatric cases were extremely rare. We report here the characteristics of pediatric BPDCN cases, including clinical manifestations and peculiar immunophenotype. [Materials and Methods] Immunophenotyping was done on bone marrow (BM) aspiration samples according to diagnostic panel and criteria established by JPLSG immunological diagnostic committee. Immunophenotyping data from July 2011 to June 2015 were collected from JPLSG immunophenotyping centers and analyzed. BPDCN cases were screened by typically CD4+ 56+ HLA-DRhi profile. Other lineage markers such as CD7, CD34, CD13, CD33, CD36, CD64, CD123, and NG2 were also analyzed. As it is well known that existence of atypical phenotype in a substantial proportion, including absence of CD56 and/or CD4, immunophenotype data were prudently investigated and compared with 21 acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) presenting M5 characteristics in FAB criteria. [Result] Out of more than 2,500 cases, 4 cases were diagnosed as typical BPDCN (CD4+ 56+ HLA-DRhi), and 2 atypical BPDCN (1 CD56-, 1 CD4-) by immunophenotyping. All 6 cases presented leukemic dissemination, but only 4 typical cases indicated extra medullary regions. Gender ratio (M: F) was 3:1 and 0:2, and median age were 6.9 years (3.3 to 11.3) and 13.8 (12.8, 14.7) respectively. All 6 cases were negative for CD34 and CD13, and positive for NG2. CD123 was also positive in all (5/5) cases. CD33 and CD36 were positive in 5 cases respectively. It was of note that CD64, typical monocytic marker, was negative in all 6 cases although it was positive in all AML-M5 cases. All BPDCN cases could be distinguished with expression patterns of NG2, CD7, CD33, CD36 (positive) or CD13, CD64 (negative). Additionally, CD2 was positive in 3/6 cases, TdT was positive in 2/6 cases. CD117 was positive in 2 cases (1 typical, 1 atypical). [Discussion] BPDCN is a rare, clinically aggressive hematologic malignancy that most commonly manifests as cutaneous lesions with or without bone marrow involvement and leukemic dissemination. Diagnosis of BPDCN has been usually made by histopathologic examination with cutaneous lesions, which is typically positive for interleukin-3 receptor (CD123), blood dendritic cell antigen 2 (BDCA2)/CD303, and TCL-1. Morphologic and immunophenotypic studies were usually performed on BM and/or peripheral blood prior to histopathologic examination, however diagnosis with these examinations as BPDCN is not so easy because of the lack of morphological peculiarity or traditional lineage-specific markers. Treatments for BPDCN patients have been also inconsistent, because there are no prospective clinical trial data to define the optimal frontline treatment. AML-like or acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL)-like regimens have been used for induction therapy, as well as lymphoma-like regimens. The difficulty of BPDCN diagnosis might affect to choose inconsistent frontline therapy. Recently some reports documented ALL oriented therapy indicated more effectiveness to BPDCN, so the diagnosis should be made precisely to evaluate the treatment effectiveness. Here we indicated new diagnostic strategy by immunophenotyping with NG2, CD7, CD33, CD36, CD13, and CD64 as well as CD4, CD56 and HLA-DR. This approach contributes not only to select treatment regimen but also to investigate molecular pathogenesis such as whole exome sequence. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 4216-4216
Author(s):  
Sangeeta Atwal ◽  
Anjum Bashir Khan ◽  
Victor Noriega ◽  
Yogesh Jethava ◽  
Michelle Kenyon ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4216 Patients who relapse after allogeneic bone marrow transplant (BMT) for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) have a poor prognosis. Salvage treatments rely on further chemotherapy, donor lymphocyte infusions (DLI) and experimental therapies. However, the treatments are often toxic and the prognosis grim particularly in patients over the age of 60 years. More recently, DNMT3A inhibition such as 5-Azacytidine (5-Aza) and Decitabine have been shown not only to have an antileukemic activity, but are also capable of inducing an antileukemic cytotoxic T lymphocyte response as well as reversal in the ratio of Tregs to Th17 CD4 cellular reactions. We therefore evaluated the role of these agents in 17 patients who have relapsed post-transplant. The indications for transplant were AML (n=13), of whom 9 had transformed from either MDS (n=5), aplastic anaemia (n=1), MDS/MPD (n=1), myelofibrosis (n=1) or CML (n=1); Of the remainder: Refractory anaemia with excess blasts II (n=2); plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia (n=1); MPD/MDS with trisomy 21 (n=1). 13 were treated with 5-Aza; 6 Decitabine and 2 had both 5-Aza and Decitabine as separate courses. In total, there were 20 courses of treatment, each comprising of a variable number of cycles of 5-Aza or Decitabine. 5-Aza was administered at a standard dosage of 75mg/m2 for 7 days every 28 days and Decitabine 20mg/m2 for 5 days every 28 days. There was no toxicity from the treatment such that patients required a dose reduction. charcteristics mean (RANGE) Age (yrs) 52 (35–67) Days from transplant before starting demethylating agent for overt relapse 559 (38–1956) Blast % before starting 5-Aza or Decitabine 25.7 (1–91) Number of cycles of 5-Azacytidine per course completed (n=14) 4 (1–15) Number of cycles of Decitabine (n=6) 2.5 (2–3) Duration of response from stopping 5-Aza or Decitabine treatment before relapse 186 (177–195) Pre-treatment blast % in responders (n=11) 22 (1–89) Pre-treatment blast % in non-responders (n=9) 31 (4–91) Responses were categorized as stable disease (SD), partial response (PR), morphological (MR) or complete cytogenetic remission (CCR) and were seen in 11 of 20 courses of treatment (55%) of which SD = 2, PR = 2, MR = 7, CCR = 0. Specifically 2 patients had SD whilst they remained on 5-Azacytidine. Of the 2 with PR, 1 had a drop in blast percentage but did not enter into remission. The other with plasmacytoid dendritic cell leukemia relapsed with recurrence of biopsy proven skin lesions had a transient response on 5-Azacytidine but progressed during the 5th cycle. 7 achieved a MR (<5% bone marrow blasts), none went into cytogenetic remission. Amongst the group of responders, 5 out of 9 patients (55%) had AML, 4 out of the 5 achieved MR and 1 PR. The mean duration of morphological remission was 186 days. Of the remainder 9 courses of treatment that did not respond, all had a pre-transplant diagnsosis of AML, of which 6 had pre-existing MDS and I myelofibrosis. There was no difference in response according to the pre-treatment blast percentage in the marrow. Conversely, one patient achieved a morphological remission after 3 cycles of Decitabine with a pre-treatment blast percentage of 89%. Equally there was no difference in response according to cytogenetic risk at first presentation or pre-treatment relapse between responders and non-responders. Importantly, 30% of patients treated with DNMT3A inhibitors are alive. In the majority of patients, donor chimersm remained unchanged pre and post 5-Aza and Dec. 2 patients received DLI immediately post 5-Azacyditine as consolidation. Out of the 17 patients, 5 had graft-versus-host-disease (GVHD) temporally associated with commencing 5-Aza or Decitabine. 2 in this group had GVHD (grade 1–3) and 3 chronic GVHD (grade 1–3). These results suggest that demethylating agents are effective following allogeneic BMT. It is encouraging that of the patients who responded, over half had a pre-transplant diagnosis of AML however more numbers are required to support this. The effect of these agents are thought to be both antileukemic for example by increasing expression of tumour associated antigens, and immunomodulatory by delaying the effect on the methylation pattern of genes that result in a significant decrease in Tregs. Disclosures: Mufti: Celgene Corporation: Consultancy, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau.


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