Chinese Clinical Oncology

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Clinical study of the number of circulating CD34+ cells in the peripheral blood from patients with myelodysplastic syndromes

  

  • Received:2012-04-18 Revised:2012-07-08 Online:2012-09-29 Published:2012-09-29

Abstract: Objective To explore the significance of the number of circulating CD34+ cells in the peripheral blood from patients with myelodysplastic syndromes(MDS) on disease subtype and prognosis. Methods The percentage and absolute count of circulating CD34+ cells of the 16 healthy individuals and 40 patients with MDS were measured by flow cytometry. Forty patients with MDS were divided into RA/RARS/RCMD subgroup or RAEB Ⅰ/RAEB Ⅱ subgroup; favorable chromosomal subgroup, intermediate chromosomal subgroup and poor chromosomal subgroup;intermediate-risk Ⅰ subgroup, intermediaterisk Ⅱ subgroup and highrisk subgroup according to WHO classification, chromosomal abnormalities and international prognostic scoring system(IPSS). Results The percentage and the absolute count of circulating CD34+ cells in peripheral blood from patients with MDS were 0.67% and 17.24 cells/μl, while they were 0.03% and 1.63cells/μl in normal control(both P<0.01). In MDS group: the percentage and the absolute count of CD34+ cells in RA/RARS/RCMD subgroup were 0.05% and 3.50 cells/μl,which were lower than 3.09% and 81.95 cells/μl in RAEB Ⅰ/RAEB Ⅱ subgroup(both P<0.01). The percentage and the absolute count of CD34+ cells in favorable chromosomal subgroup were 0.05% and 3.50 cells/μl, while they were 1.29% and 18.23 cells/μl in intermediate subgroup and 3.09% and 133.10 cells/μl in poor chromosomal subgroup, respectively. With the emergence of chromosomal abnormalities, the percentage and absolute count were gradually increased(P<0.05). The percentage and the absolute count of CD34+ cells in intermediaterisk Ⅰ(0.05% and 3.50 cells/μl),intermediaterisk Ⅱ(1.57% and 35.55 cells/μl) and highrisk subgroup(8.15% and 192.05 cells/μl) were gradually increased with the progressive increase of IPSS score(all P<0.01).
Conclusion Detection of the number of circulating CD34+ cells in peripheral blood cells may be a useful tool for subtyping and predicting the prognosis of MDS.

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