Myeloid sarcoma:: Clinical and morphologic criteria useful for diagnosis

被引:91
作者
Audouin, J [1 ]
Comperat, E [1 ]
Le Tourneau, A [1 ]
Camilleri-Broët, S [1 ]
Adida, C [1 ]
Molina, T [1 ]
Diebold, J [1 ]
机构
[1] Hop Hotel Dieu, Serv Jacques Delarue Anat & Cytol Pathol, F-75181 Paris 04, France
关键词
myeloid sarcoma; granulocytic sarcoma;
D O I
10.1177/106689690301100404
中图分类号
R36 [病理学];
学科分类号
100104 [病理学与病理生理学];
摘要
Extramedullary accumulation of myeloblasts or immature myeloid cells form tumors called myeloid sarcoma in the WHO classification. Such tumors develop in lymphoid organs, bone (skull, orbit, etc.), skin, soft tissue, various mucosae and organs, and the CNS. They may precede or occur concurrently with acute myeloid leukemia, or reveal blastic transformation of chronic myeloproliferative disorders or myelodysplastic syndromes. They may also reveal relapses in treated patients. They are constituted by a diffuse infiltrate made up of medium-to-large cells. The cells are difficult to identify. Imprints are very useful. Immunohistochemistry can help diagnose and distinguish four variants: granulocytic myeloperoxidase (MPO+, CD 68+ [KP1 +/-, PGM1-] lysozyme+, CD 34+/-), monoblastic (MPO-, CD 68+, [KP1+, PGM1+] lysozyme+, CD 34-), myelomonoblastic (MPO-, CD 68+, [KP1+, PGM1+] lysozyme+, CD 34-), or megakaryoblastic (positivity for factor VIII, CD61, CD31). Immunohistochemistry sometimes demonstrates expression of CD 43, CD 7, CD 79a, and CD 56 (particularly the monoblastic variant with t [8;21]). Recently the demonstration of CD 99 and CD 117, which can now be done on paraffin sections, may be useful to identify blasts of granulocytic origin. The diagnosis is missed in about 50% of cases when immunohistochemistry is not used. Patients with myeloid sarcomas should be treated in the same way as patients with acute myeloblastic leukemia. Disease progression and prognosis are similar for the two conditions.
引用
收藏
页码:271 / 282
页数:12
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