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Clinical Importance of Lymphoblasts with T Markers in Childhood Acute Leukemia

385

Citations

22

References

1975

Year

Abstract

Of 48 children with acute lymphocytic leukemia 11 had blast cells with receptors for sheep erythrocytes in their initial bone-marrow aspirates and 37 did not. A comparison of selected clinical features indicated striking differences between the two groups. Leukemia with the receptors was associated with a high proportion of older children, predominantly boys, a thymic mass, and a high white-cell count at diagnosis. In contrast, the 37 children with leukemia without the receptors were generally less than five years of age, with a nearly equal distribution of boys and girls; all but one had normal chest roentgenograms, and only one had a white-cell count greater than 100,000. Thus, the presence or absence of lymphoblasts with sheep erythrocyte receptors--a T-cell marker--distinguishes two forms of childhood acute lymphocytic leukemia, each with a distinct distribution of age and sex as well as other characteristic clinical features.

References

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