Flow cytometry thresholds of myeloperoxidase detection to discriminate between acute lymphoblastic or myeloblastic leukaemia

Summary The World Health Organization 2008 Classification emphasizes myeloperoxidase (MPO) detection as sufficient for assigning a blast population to the myeloid lineage. Published MPO positivity thresholds are 10% for flow cytometry (FCM) but 3% for cytochemistry. Here we re‐evaluated the FCM‐MPO...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of haematology 2013-05, Vol.161 (4), p.551-555
Hauptverfasser: Guy, Julien, Antony‐Debré, Iléana, Benayoun, Emmanuel, Arnoux, Isabelle, Fossat, Chantal, Garff‐Tavernier, Magali, Raimbault, Anna, Imbert, Michèle, Maynadié, Marc, Lacombe, Francis, Béné, Marie C, Wagner‐Ballon, Orianne
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Summary The World Health Organization 2008 Classification emphasizes myeloperoxidase (MPO) detection as sufficient for assigning a blast population to the myeloid lineage. Published MPO positivity thresholds are 10% for flow cytometry (FCM) but 3% for cytochemistry. Here we re‐evaluated the FCM‐MPO threshold by comparing retrospectively 128 acute lymphoblastic leukaemias and 75 acute myeloid leukaemias without maturation, all assessed by benzidine‐based cytochemistry. A 13% threshold was found to be relevant using an isotype control as background‐reference (sensitivity 95·1%, specificity 91·7%). Residual normal lymphocytes proved to be an advantageous alternative reference, a threshold of 28% yielding improved 97·4% sensitivity and 96·1% specificity.
ISSN:0007-1048
1365-2141
DOI:10.1111/bjh.12277