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Diagnostic features

Last reviewed dd mmm yyyy. Last edited dd mmm yyyy

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  • peripheral blood
    • pancytopenia with circulating blasts is characteristic
    • WBC - normal or raised; 50% of individuals have count less than 10 x 10^9/l; 20% have count greater than 100 x 10^9 /l; usually a preponderance of blasts but 10% have aleukaemic leukaemia - blasts absent from peripheral blood although still present in marrow
    • red cells - anaemia - usually normocytic but may be macrocytic; progressive, may become severe
    • platelets - usually reduced
  • bone marrow - hypercellular; diagnosis is made on having more than 30% blasts in the marrow
  • CSF - blasts present in meningeal leukaemia
  • CXR - often mediastinal mass in ALL especially T cell
  • blood cultures - always if patient is febrile
  • coagulation studies - DIC indicated by reduced fibrinogen, increased prothrombin time, presence of fibrin degradation products
  • hyperuricaemia and hypokalaemia often seen
  • important to distinguish between AML and ALL:
    • morphological - Auer rods pathognomonic of AML
    • histochemical stains for myeloid enzymes such as peroxidase or chloroacetate confirm AML
    • surface markers characteristic of primitive lymphoid cells identify ALL, e.g. terminal deoxynucleotide transferase present in 95% of cases of ALL
    • primitive B lymphocyte antigens such as CALLA, B1, BA1 may help to identify ALL
    • T cell ALL diagnosed by rosette formation with sheep erythrocytes or identification of cell markers by monoclonal antibodies such as Leu-1 or Leu-9

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