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1/204. The inv(11)(p15q22) chromosome translocation of therapy-related myelodysplasia with NUP98-DDX10 and DDX10-NUP98 fusion transcripts.

    Chromosomal abnormalities involving the 11p15 or 11q22-23 bands have been reported in several types of human neoplasms including hematopoietic malignancies. The abnormalities are observed in therapy-related malignancies and less frequently in de novo myeloid malignancies. Abnormality of the MLL gene located on chromosome 11q23 has been well known in therapy-related myeloid malignancies, but it has been reported only recently that the inv(11)(p15q22) in de novo or therapy-related myeloid malignancies results in the fusion of NUP98 on chromosome 11p15 and DDX10 on chromosome 11q22. NUP98 is a nucleoporin that composes the nuclear pore complex and is the target gene in leukemia with the t(7;11)(p15;p15). The DDX10 gene encodes a putative adenosine triphosphate-dependent DEAD box rna helicase. Here we present another patient with acute myelocytic leukemia (M4) transformed from chronic myelomonocytic leukemia with the inv(11) chromosome who had been treated with etoposide for a germ cell tumor. By reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) of the rna from the leukemic cells of the patient, DDX10-NUP98 and NUP98-DDX10 fusion transcripts were detected. Our case confirms that the inv(11) is a rare chromosomal translocation that is associated with therapy-related or de novo myeloid malignancy and involves NUP98 and DDX10 but not MLL. RT-PCR of the fusion transcripts might be applied to the detection of a small number of leukemic cells in the bone marrow or blood of patients in remission or in the cells harvested for autologous transplantation.
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2/204. NUP98 is fused to PMX1 homeobox gene in human acute myelogenous leukemia with chromosome translocation t(1;11)(q23;p15).

    The nucleoporin gene NUP98 was found fused to the HOXA9, HOXD13, or DDX10 genes in human acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) with chromosome translocations t(7;11)(p15;p15), t(2;11)(q35;p15), or inv(11)(p15;q22), respectively. We report here the fusion between the NUP98 gene and another homeobox gene PMX1 in a case of human AML with a t(1;11)(q23;p15) translocation. The chimeric NUP98-PMX1 transcript was detected; however, there was no reciprocal PMX1-NUP98 fusion transcript. Like the NUP98-HOXA9 fusion, NUP98 and PMX1 were fused in frame and the N-terminal GLFG-rich docking region of the NUP98 and the PMX1 homeodomain were conserved in the NUP98-PMX1 fusion, suggesting that PMX1 homeodomain expression is upregulated and that the fusion protein may act as an oncogenic transcription factor. The fusion to NUP98 results in the addition of the strong transcriptional activation domain located in the N-terminal region of NUP98 to PMX1. These findings suggest that constitutive expression and alteration of the transcriptional activity of the PMX1 homeodomain protein may be critical for myeloid leukemogenesis.
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3/204. Secondary myeloid/natural killer cell precursor acute leukemia following essential thrombocythemia.

    The de novo leukemic transformation of essential thrombocythemia is a rare event, and usually associated with previous treatments. We describe a patient who received treatments with nitrosourea for long-standing essential thrombocythemia and subsequently developed extramedullary tumors, tentatively diagnosed as lymphoblastic lymphoma. Combination chemotherapy was initially successful, but relapsed with marked bone marrow involvement. Surface marker analysis revealed that the tumor cells had CD5, CD7, CD33, CD34, and CD56 antigens but lacked other T-cell, and B-cell markers. Immunogenotypical studies revealed germline configurations for both T-cell receptors and immunoglobulin genes. These clinical and phenotypical features are consistent with a myeloid/natural killer cell precursor leukemia, a recently proposed distinct clinical entity. To our knowledge, this is the first report of secondary leukemia of myeloid/ natural killer cell precursor origin, and suggest that myeloid/natural killer cell precursor might be a potent target of therapy-related leukemia.
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4/204. Richter's transformation presenting as an obstructing endobronchial lesion.

    A 60-year-old man with chronic lymphocytic leukemia presented to our institution with a recurring lingular pneumonia. On fiberoptic bronchoscopy, the patient was found to have an endobronchial mass obstructing the lingula and left upper lobe. biopsy specimens of the mass demonstrated anaplastic large cell lymphoma consistent with Richter's transformation. Only one case of endobronchial Richter's transformation has been previously reported in the literature. This was described as peribronchial and endobronchial leukemic infiltrates within the bronchial mucosa. We report the first case of an obstructive endobronchial mass secondary to Richter's transformation. The endobronchial mass was treated with a Nd-YAG laser to maintain airway patency while the patient underwent chemotherapy, resulting in complete resolution of the mass within the airway.
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5/204. Meningeal leukemia in the blastic phase of chronic granulocytic leukemia.

    One hundred one patients were treated for Ph' positive chronic granulocytic leukemia (CGL) in the blastic phase. In seven of these (6.9 per cent), meningeal leukemia developed. Of the 99 patients who died of their disease, a complete remission was achieved in 12 with a median survival of 12 months (three to 28 months). Incomplete responders had a median survival of only 2.5 months (one to 14 months). In five of the 12 complete responders (42 per cent), but in only two of the incomplete responders (2.3 per cent), meningeal leukemia developed. The principal neurologic signs were cranial nerve palsies and papilledema. All patients had pleocytosis with myeloblasts in the cerebrospinal fluid. As in patients with acute leukemia and diffuse histiocytic lymphoma, increased survival of patients in whom hematologic remission from the blastic phase of CGL is achieved may allow sufficient time for the development of meningeal leukemia. Intrathecal methotrexate is extremely successful in treating this complication. cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis was eradicated in all seven of our patients, and neurologic symptoms and signs were completely eliminated in five patients. No evidence of meningeal leukemia was found in three of the five patients in whom an autopsy was performed.
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6/204. hypercalcemia complicating leukemic transformation of agnogenic myeloid metaplasia-myelofibrosis.

    hypercalcemia is a common and potentially life-threatening metabolic derangement associated with many malignancies, especially solid tumors and multiple myeloma. hypercalcemia has been reported only rarely with acute myelogenous leukemia. We describe a patient who developed hypercalcemia in association with transformation of agnogenic myeloid metaplasia into M7 acute myelogenous leukemia. Laboratory investigation revealed low levels of serum parathyroid hormone, undetectable levels of parathyroid hormone-related peptide, and normal levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D. These observations suggest that another mediator was responsible for hypercalcemia in this patient. awareness of this rare complication of acute myelogenous leukemia is essential for prompt diagnosis and management.
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7/204. Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg-like cells in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia represent the outgrowth of single germinal-center B-cell-derived clones: potential precursors of Hodgkin and reed-sternberg cells in Hodgkin's disease.

    In rare cases of B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL), large cells morphologically similar to or indistinguishable from Hodgkin/Reed-Sternberg (HRS) cells of Hodgkin's disease (HD) can be found in a background of otherwise typical B-CLL. To test these HRS-like cells for a potential clonal relationship to the B-CLL cells, single cells were micromanipulated from immunostained tissue sections, and rearranged immunoglobulin genes were amplified from HRS-like cells and B-CLL cells and sequenced. The same variable (V) gene rearrangements with shared and distinct somatic mutations were found in HRS-like and B-CLL cells from 1 patient, which indicates derivation of these cells from 2 distinct members of a germinal-center B-cell clone. Separate clonal V gene rearrangements were amplified from HRS-like and B-CLL cells from 2 other patients, showing concomitant presence of 2 distinct expanded B-cell clones. Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) was detected in the HRS-like cells of these 2 latter cases, indicating clonal expansion of an EBV-harboring B cell in the setting of B-CLL. There is evidence that HRS-like cells in B-CLL, like HRS cells in HD, derive from germinal-center B cells. In all cases, somatic mutations have been detected in the rearranged V genes of the HRS-like cells, and in 1 of the EBV-positive HRS-like cell clones, somatic mutations rendered an originally functional V gene rearrangement nonfunctional. We speculate that the HRS-like cells in B-CLL represent potential precursors for HRS cells causing HD.
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8/204. Blastic crisis in previously clinically silent chronic myelogenous leukemia.

    A patient is described in whom CML first presented as blastic crisis. The diagnosis of CML was based upon the findings of Ph(1) chromosome in the bone marrow, basophilia in the peripheral blood, absence of NAP activity in the leukocytes, elevated serum vitamin B(12) and an enlarged firm spleen. CML with blastic crisis as its first expression is relatively rare, as compared to CML in which blastic crisis appears as a phase of prolonged clinically manifest disease.
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9/204. Myelotoxicity of vincristine-prednisone therapy in treatment of chronic myelogenous leukemia in blastic transformation.

    Therapy with vincristine and prednisone (VP) has produced remissions in 30% of patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia in blast transformation (CML-BT). The possibility that therapy with VP can adversely affect the production of mature granulocytes in this setting has not been appreciated, as these drugs are generally considered free of myelotoxicity. In this report we review eight courses of VP administered to three patients with CML-BT. Granulocytopenia developed following all five courses in which granulocyte counts were normal prior to therapy; granulocytopenia worsened in two of three courses in patients who were granulocytopenic prior to therapy. Progressive leukemia in the marrow was excluded as a cause of granulocytopenia. It is important to recognize that VP therapy rather than disease progression may be a cause of granulocytopenia in CML-BT.
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10/204. Blastic/blastoid transformation of follicular lymphoma: immunohistologic and molecular analyses of five cases.

    Progression of follicular lymphoma to a higher-grade malignancy frequently heralds a poor prognosis. Clinical transformation is variably accompanied by a spectrum of histologic changes characterized by alteration in growth and cytology. Although several cytogenetic events and potential oncogenes have been documented in this progression, the underlying molecular mechanisms are largely unknown. We present five patients with an unusual histologic transformation of follicular lymphoma manifested by blastic/blastoid morphology. This transformation is histologically distinct from other types of transformation of follicular lymphoma. All five cases exhibited the t(14;18) translocation and expressed the BCL-2 protein. In addition, two of the five patients showed increased levels of the p53 protein within neoplastic cells implicating a possible role for this oncogene in blastic/blastoid transformation. The lack of BCL-1 and myeloid antigens by immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry studies served to distinguish blastic/blastoid transformation of follicular lymphoma from its morphologic mimics. This distinction is clinically important because lymphoblastic and myeloid leukemias require significantly different therapeutic modalities and show better prognosis. Moreover, the lack of Epstein-Barr virus-specific mRNA suggests that this virus is unlikely to participate in blastic/blastoid transformation of follicular lymphoma.
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