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Acute leukaemia types

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Acute Myeloid Leukaemia
Markers with value in confirming primitive phenotype


It is important in AML diagnosis to establish the primitive nature of the abnormal cells, some markers can contribute to this:

(1) The typically low CD45 expression and low side scatter of most blast cells means that myeloid blast cells tend to form a relatively uniform population that is clearly separated from that of lymphocytes on CD45/SSc plots and is used to identify them in "gating" (please see CD45). NOTE It is important to be aware of AML forms that have do not fit these typical patterns particularly APL and monocytic AML

(2) Other markers of early differentiation: particularly CD34, but also TdT and CD7 may be expressed by AML cells and can help increase diagnostic confidence that blast cells are present

(3) While not fully specific, in some cases particular primitive markers are more frequently associated with a particular lineages so may contribute to lineage assignment in difficult cases (see comments).

Strong role in AML
CD45 Expressed by all leukocytes and precursors (100% of cases), but in AML expression is "weak" i.e. significantly less intense than normal T cells, B cells or monocytes. In monocytic AML expression may be stronger.
CD34 Frequently expressed by AML blast cells (40-80% of cases) - most often in less differentiated forms of AML. Note that expression is also frequent (and often stronger) in ALL
Less strong role in AML
TDT Expressed in some cases of AML (5-20%) particularly in less differentiated blast cells, often on a sub-population of cells. More typically associated with ALL.
CD7 Similar to TdT, although more frequently expressed (20-40%) CD7 tends to be expressed by AML blasts in the more primitive forms. CD7 is most consistently a marker of T-lineage (including T-ALL).

Markers with value in confirming myeloid differentiation


1 Most often typical AML will express 3 or 4 of these markers; however it is not essential that any is present and some cases may express only one of these.


Strong myeloid restriction
MPO A strong lineage marker for AML (expressed in around 80% of cases) that when detected by flow cytometry is diagnostic of myeloid differentiation (AML or MPAL) although potentially gives less confident evidence on immunocytochemistry.
Moderate myeloid restriction
CD117 An early marker of myeloid lineage seen in around 80% of AML often recognising more primitive forms, aberrant expression in up to 20% of ALL
CD33 A good marker for AML that is often less strongly expressed in monocytic forms
CD13 A good lineage marker for AML aquired a little later, higher than CD13 in monocytic forms

Other markers helpful in detecting myeloid lineage (often in AML subtypes)
These markers have less general value in diagnosis, but can be useful in subtype selection or in cases whwere lineage is ambiguous.
Marker Comment
CD10 One of tne of the first lineage-markers acquired in AML with good relative specificity
CD11b One of tne of the first lineage-markers acquired in AML with good relative specificity
CD11c One of tne of the first lineage-markers acquired in AML with good relative specificity
CD14 A good marker for AML that is often less strongly expressed in monocytic forms
CD64 A good lineage marker for AML aquired a little later, higher than CD13 in monocytic forms