Summary.We analysed a group of 390 patients, diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL). Cases were subclassified as morphologically typical and atypical CLL according to the criteria of the FAB proposal. Typical CLL cases were mostly diagnosed at a low-risk stage (Binet A/Rai 0), required no immediate treatment and expected a long survival; atypical CLL cases mostly presented at a more advanced risk stage (Binet B/Rai I-II), usually required immediate treatment and their survival was shorter. Moreover, clinical staging was of prognostic significance in typical but not in atypical cases.In typical CLL, del(11q) was the most common chromosomal abnormality (21%) whereas in atypical CLL trisomy 12 was found in about 65% of the cases documented with an abnormal karyotype. Although chromosomal abnormalities were associated with a poor survival in typical CLL, they are of no prognostic significance in atypical CLL.Based on these data, we conclude that subtyping CLL by morphology enables the identification of two groups of cases, each characterized by a specific clinical presentation, different cytogenetic abnormalities and prognostic parameters. We speculate that these two groups may represent two related, but different, diseases with different prognostic parameters and a different survival.
The incidence of trisomy 12 was studied by conventional chromosome analysis in 111 patients referred as B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (B-CLL). Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) was also applied in 34 of those patients with either a normal karyotype or no analysable mitoses. By karyotyping, trisomy 12 was present in 11.7% (13/111), whereas additional FISH increased the incidence to 14.4% (16/111). When subdividing our cases in either typical CLL (n = 90), fulfilling the FAB classification criteria, or atypical CLL (n = 21), with one or more variations from those criteria, the incidence of +12 by metaphase analysis was 3% and 48%, respectively. Additional FISH increased the incidence to 4% and 57%. The most common aberration in atypical CLL was FMC7 positivity (n = 11), followed by CD5 negativity (n = 8), strong surface immunoglobulin staining (n = 7) and atypical morphology (n = 6). Trisomy 12 could only be demonstrated in a small proportion of neoplastic cells in all positive cases. By FISH and/or karyotyping, all available samples at diagnosis of the disease were positive.
Background: Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) affect laboratory coagulations tests. Activated carbon (AC) can be used for adsorption of DOACs during acute human intoxications. Objectives: This study evaluates whether AC can also be used to resolve DOAC interference on in vitro clotting tests (prothrombin time [PT], activated partial thromboplastin time [aPTT], and lupus anticoagulant [LA] assays).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.