Plasmacytoid cells in the bone marrow of 3 patients with myeloma and plasma cells in the bone marrow of a 6-year-old boy with an infectious disease were assessed cytophotometrically, first after Giemsaand second after Feulgen staining. The cell and nuclear surface and the nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio were determined from the number of measuring points. The nuclear DNA content of individual cells was registered and the distribution of DNA within the nucleus was assessed by the distributional error. Both the mean nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio and the distributional error of myeloma cells varied from patient to patient but could not be used to differentiate between normal plasma cells and myeloma cells. It was not possible either to differentiate these cell types by multiplying the mean nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio with the mean distributional error of the nuclear DNA. A strong correlation between cell and cytoplasmic surface area was observed both in normal plasma cells and in myeloma cells.
It is concluded from the prognostic factors of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, as far as they have become known up to now, such as initial leukocyte count, extent of organ infiltration, etc, that the pre-diagnostic duration of signs, representing a measure of the proliferation activity of the leukaemia cells, could also represent a relevant prognostic characteristic. A check conducted in 90 children treated between 1966--1975 yields a correlation only between a very short pre-diagnostic duration of signs (less than 2 weeks) and the duration of the first complete remission (as well as the survival time). However, even those prognostic factors which are already generally recognised, possess merely limited reliability, because they do not take the individual response to therapy into account. Hence, improvement of prognosis of the course of the disease can be expected only if the continuous decrease of the remaining population of blasts during the early phase of remission can be determined with greater accuracy than before.
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