A relatively simple and non-toxic out-patient-based regimen for the mobilization of Philadelphia-negative (Ph-ve) mononuclear cells in chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) was evaluated in 10 patients, nine in stable chronic phase and one in accelerated phase. They received oral hydroxyurea at a mean dose of 3.5 g/m2 daily for 7 d, followed by 300 micrograms of G-CSF daily until the last day of harvesting. In the nine chronic-phase patients the mean number of days from the end of hydroxyurea to the commencement of harvesting was 14.5 (range 10-18). The patient in accelerated phase recovered and was harvested after 6 d. The mean number of aphereses performed was 3.4. Adequate numbers of stem cells were obtained in 9/10 patients judged by our usual criteria. Side-effects were mild in comparison to published intravenous schedules. No patients lost their hair. Five (50%) patients required admission with neutropenic fever which responded to antibiotics in all cases. Four (40%) patients developed a transient rash and four (40%) experienced mild oral mucostis. This level of toxicity enabled half of the patients to be treated entirely on an out-patient basis. The harvest products were analysed for cells belonging to the leukaemic clone by conventional cytogenetics, FISH and PCR. All were PCR positive. The mean Ph positivities by cytogenetics and FISH were comparable at 18.1% and 15% respectively. Half the patients had> 98% normal metaphases. We conclude that this approach is comparable in efficacy to published intravenous regimens and significantly less toxic. It can be safely used at diagnosis before interferon therapy commences.
The Kleihauer technique, based on acid elution of maternal red cells, is the mostly widely used technique in the UK to screen for, and estimate the volume of, foetomaternal haemorrhage (FMH) and for determining the need for additional doses of anti-D immunoglobulin to prevent maternal alloimmunization. However, technicians often report difficulties in identifying and accurately counting maternal red cells in the blood film, leading to imprecision in the calculated FMH. In this report, we describe a simple modification of the standard Kleihauer technique, based on performing acid elution of only half of the film. Compared to the standard method, the modified technique showed improved accuracy and reduced interobserver variability across a range of simulated FMH volumes. There was a high degree of correlation between the new technique and FMH estimated by flow cytometry (r2 = 0.916, P < 0.001). Technicians found the new technique easy to incorporate into routine practice in a busy teaching hospital laboratory and were impressed by the relative ease of counting maternal ghost cells. The modified technique has been used routinely in our laboratory for 3 years, during which time our performance in the UK National External Quality Assurance Scheme for FMH has been uniformly satisfactory.
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