Abstract
We investigated cup-like nuclear morphology of acute myeloid leukemia blasts in 266 randomly selected patients and its association with hematologic findings, disease markers and outcome data. Cup-like acute myeloid leukemia was diagnosed in 55 patients (21%). It was associated with female sex, high white blood cell and blast cell counts, normal karyotype, and low CD34 and HLA-DR expression. Mutations of FLT3, NPM1 or both were detected in 84.9% compared with 58.1% in cases without this morphology (p=0.001). There was no influence on response to treatment or survival. Therefore, cup-like nuclear morphology is an indicator of normal karyotype and should guide more specific molecular analyses. ©2008 Ferrata Storti Foundation.
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Kroschinsky, F. P., Schäkel, U., Fischer, R., Mohr, B., Oelschlaegel, U., Repp, R., … Thiede, C. (2008). Cup-like acute myeloid leukemia: New disease or artificial phenomenon? Haematologica, 93(2), 283–286. https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.11669
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