T‐prolymphocytic leukaemia (T‐PLL) is a rare disorder with a poor outcome. Presentation features were studied in 78 T‐PLL cases. Although 53 patients (group A) presented with typical progressive disease including rapidly increasing leucocytosis, 25 patients (group B) experienced an initial indolent clinical course with stable moderate leucocytosis. The morphology and antigenic profile of abnormal cells were similar in both groups, except for a lower incidence of CD45RO+ CD45RA− pattern in group B. A high incidence of inv(14)(q11;q32), t(14;14)(q11;q32) and i(8)(q10) chromosomal abnormalities were found in both groups. After an initial indolent phase (median 33 months; 6–103 months), 16 group B patients progressed to an aggressive stage with clinical and laboratory features similar to group A. Moreover, median survival after progression was short in both groups. In conclusion, T‐PLL may start as an indolent disease similar to that reported in ataxia telangectasia. In this rare genetic disorder, some patients develop stable T‐cell clones which progress toward T‐PLL‐like leukaemia. Moreover, ATM gene mutations have been reported in T‐PLL. Thus, both diseases are likely to be closely related.
We describe the clinical, cytological and cytogenetic features of 49 cases of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) in childhood. Three children had received prior cytotoxic treatment (group 1); all of these had cytogenetic abnormalities and died shortly after diagnosis. 22 children had constitutional anomalies (group 2). The remaining 24 MDS were considered as 'primary' (group 3). Hypoplastic marrow was found in nine cases, and only 53% of the MDS fitted the adult FAB classification. Transformation to AML occurred in 11 cases, development of aplastic anaemia in three cases, and spontaneous remission in one case each of RA and RAEB. Differences were observed between groups 2 and 3 in terms of mean age at diagnosis (11.1 months v 5 years), rate of cytogenetic anomalies (15% v 38%) and rate of progression towards acute leukaemia (13% v 29%). In group 2, all the fur girls studied exhibited a polyclonal pattern of X-inactivation, which suggests that MDS may be only the haematological expression of an embryological defect with different target tissues. This study suggests that some MDS in childhood can exhibit particular features such as congenital anomalies associated with MDS, bone marrow hypoplasia, polyclonality, and spontaneous remission. It emphasizes that the FAB classification is not adequate for children and addresses the question of whether these MDS are always malignant diseases.
The influence of work intensity and duration on the white blood cell (WBC), lymphocyte (L) and platelet (P) count response to exercise was studied in 16 trained subjects (22 +/- 5.4 years, means +/- SD). They performed three cyclo-ergospirometric protocols: A) 10 min at 150 W followed by a progressive test (30 W/3 min) till exhaustion; B) constant maximal work (VO2max); C) a 45 min Square-Wave Endurance Exercise Test (SWEET), (n = 5). Arterial blood samples were taken: at rest, submaximal and maximal exercise in A; maximal exercise in B; 15th, 30th and 45th min in the SWEET. Lactate, [H+], PaCO2, PaO2, [Hct], Hb, cortisol, ACTH, total platelet volume (TPV), total blood red cell (RBC), WBC, L and P were measured. At 150 W, WBC, L, P, and TPV increased. VO2max did not differ between A and B, but a difference was found in total exercise time (A = 25 +/- 3 min; B = 7 +/- 2 min, p less than 0.001). In A, at VO2max, the increase was very small for Hct, [Hb], and RBC (10%), in contrast with large changes for WBC (+93%), L (+137%), P (+32%), TPV (+35%), [H+] (+39%), lactate (+715%), and ACTH (+95%). At VO2max there were no differences in these variables between A and B. During the SWEET: WBC, L, P, TPV and ACTH increased at the 15th min as much as in VO2max, but no difference was observed between the 15th, 30th and 45th min, except for ACTH which continued to rise; the lactate increase during the SWEET was about half (+341%) the value observed at VO2max, and [H+] did not vary with respect to values at rest.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
The history of a 28-year-old woman with anaplastic large cell lymphoma (ALCL) in the first trimester of her pregnancy is reported. Investigations allowed to diagnose a T-cell CD30 positive ALCL, which appearance is rare during pregnancy. Moreover, the atypical lymphoid cells were found in the peripheral blood and were predominantly small to medium sized with nuclear irregularities and cytoplasmic azurophilic granules, which allowed the hypothesis of leukaemic presentation of a small cell variant ALCL. A variant of the t(2:5)(p23:q35) was found [del(2)(p22)]. The patient died shortly after diagnosis.
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