scholarly journals Chronic Lymphocytic Leukaemia Presenting with Pancytopenia: ARare Haematological Coincidence

Author(s):  
Iffat Jamal ◽  
Shuchi Smita ◽  
Ravi Bhushan Raman ◽  
Kaushal Kumar ◽  
Vijayanand Choudhary

Chronic Lymphocytic Leukaemia (CLL) is commonly associated with autoimmune cytopenias but CLL presenting with pancytopenia is a rare occurrence. Here, we present a case of 56-year-old male patient, who presented with pallor, mild hepatosplenomegaly, right-sided pleural effusion in chest x-ray, pancytopenia and his bone marrow showed infiltration by mature appearing lymphoid cells making a diagnosis of CLL. Despite the frequency of these immune mediated cytopenia, only few cases of pancytopenia have been described so far to the best of our knowledge. Hence, to emphasise the rarity of such haematological coincidence we are presenting this case report. CLL generally presents with persistent absolute lymphocytosis on peripheral smear with an absolute monoclonal lymphocyte count of more than 5000/cumm. There is a common association with Autoimmune Haemolytic Anaemia (AIHA) and Immune Thrombocytopenia (ITP) and the association is called as Evan’s syndrome. Its pathogenesis is associated with autoimmune process. AIHA, ITP, and Pure Red Cell Aplasia (PRCA) are commonly associated complications seen in CLL. The pathogenesis of AIHA and ITP are antibody this inplace of the reactions and abnormal T cell activity is noted in the pathogenesis of PRCA. Despite of the frequency of these immune mediated cytopenias noted in CLL, bone marrow was seen to be hypercellular in most of the cases and marrow hypoplasia have been reported in only 2 cases reported in literature so far. In the present case, although pancytopenia was present on peripheral blood smear examination but bone marrow was hypercellular for age with diffuse infiltration by monoclonal mature appearing lymphoid cells which makes this case all the more interesting. Despite repeated blood transfusions,antiviral drug Tenofovir and aggressive supportive measures for 6 months, he developed right-sided pleural effusion and succumbed to his illness.

2020 ◽  
pp. 5302-5310
Author(s):  
Clive S. Zent ◽  
Aaron Polliack

Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL)/small lymphocytic lymphoma is the most prevalent lymphoid neoplasm in Europe and North America. The ‘cell of origin’ is a mature B lymphocyte with a rearranged immunoglobulin gene. CLL cells express modest amounts of surface immunoglobulin, and are characterized by defective apoptosis. The cause of CLL is unknown. Most patients show no specific clinical features of disease and are diagnosed during evaluation of an incidental finding of peripheral blood lymphocytosis, lymphadenopathy, or splenomegaly. A small percentage of patients (<10%) present with symptomatic disease resulting from (1) tissue accumulation of lymphocytes such as disfiguring lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly with abdominal discomfort, profound fatigue, drenching night sweats, weight loss, and fever; or (2) manifestations of marrow failure with cytopenias including anaemia and thrombocytopenia. All CLL patients have an increased risk of infection, autoimmune cytopenias, and second haematological (e.g. diffuse large B-cell lymphoma) and nonhaematological malignancies. Diagnosis is usually made by analysis of the immunophenotype of the monoclonal circulating cells in the peripheral blood. In patients with the small lymphocytic variant of CLL without a detectable circulating monoclonal B-cell population, the diagnosis is made using tissue from the bone marrow, lymph nodes, or spleen. Treatment—there is no standard curative therapy and patients should not be treated until they have progressive and symptomatic disease or develop anaemia or thrombocytopenia due to bone marrow failure. If a decision is made to treat, then the best initial treatment should be given, based on evaluation of the patient’s disease characteristics with specific attention to the integrity of TP53 (coding for p53) and patient fitness.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 4800-4800
Author(s):  
Achille Ambrosetti ◽  
Roberta Zanotti ◽  
Marco Chilosi ◽  
Flavia Zanetti ◽  
Maurizio Lestani ◽  
...  

Abstract New biological prognostic factors have been developed over the last years with the aim of predicting at presentation the heterogeneous clinical course of B chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (B-CLL) and of planning a risk-adapted treatment strategy. Among them ZAP-70 expression on leukemic cells as evaluated by molecular analysis or flow cytometry, initially proposed as surrogate of IgVH mutational status, appears a strong prognostic marker in B-CLL. However the optimal methodological approach to immunophenotipical demonstration of ZAP-70 expression as still matter of debate. We evaluated the cytoplasmic expression of ZAP-70 protein in leukemic cells by immunohistochemical method on bone marrow trephine biopsies taken at diagnosis of 84 patients with B-CLL. We used a mouse anti-human monoclonal antibody to ZAP-70 (clone 2F3.2, 1/200, Upstate, Lake Placid NY) with a polymeric labelling two-step method (Dako cytomation EnVision+, HRP). The results were correlated with age, sex, Binet stage, pattern of bone marrow infiltration, survival and clinical outcome. They were 54 males (64%), aged 34 to 80 years (median 62.5). At presentation 69 (82%) were Binet stage A, 9 (11%) stage B and 6 (7%) stage C. Among the 60 survivors, the median follow-up period from diagnosis was 78.5 months (range 22 – 236 months) Thirty-nine cases (46%) of B-CLL patients had cytoplasmic expression of ZAP-70. This group of patients presented higher percentage of advanced Binet stage (B–C) (p= 0.001). The ZAP-70 positivity was significantly related to inferior OS (55% vs 90% at 7 years)(HR 4.67 CI 1.95–11.14) and PFS (15% vs 57% at 7 years) (HR 5.52 CI 2.57–11.86), confirmed in multivariate analysis. ZAP-70 expression was correlated to poorer outcome also when we evaluated only the 69 stage A patients and the 56 cases with non-diffuse bone marrow infiltration, whereas in patients with diffuse pattern ZAP-70 expression had no prognostic significance. In conclusion, immunohistological detection of ZAP-70 on bone marrow samples at diagnosis appears a useful methodological approach to identify patients with different prognosis in B-CLL.


2008 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 94-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Montserrat ◽  
R. M. Brugués ◽  
J. L. Vives Corrons ◽  
C. Rozman

The Lancet ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 311 (8064) ◽  
pp. 606 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonino Carbone ◽  
Armando Santoro ◽  
Silvana Pilotti ◽  
Franco Rilke

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