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  • 1
    In: Modern Pathology, Elsevier BV, Vol. 34, No. 1 ( 2021-01), p. 59-69
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0893-3952
    Language: English
    Publisher: Elsevier BV
    Publication Date: 2021
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2041318-X
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  • 2
    In: Leukemia & Lymphoma, Informa UK Limited, Vol. 62, No. 3 ( 2021-02-23), p. 752-754
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1042-8194 , 1029-2403
    Language: English
    Publisher: Informa UK Limited
    Publication Date: 2021
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2030637-4
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  • 3
    In: Pediatrics, American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), Vol. 129, No. 2 ( 2012-02-01), p. e523-e528
    Abstract: SH2D1A gene defects are the cause of X-linked lymphoproliferative disorder (XLP-1), a rare condition characterized by severe immune dysregulation. We present a patient lacking the typical symptoms of XLP-1, but experiencing a severe unusual skin condition encompassing features of dermatosclerosis and vesiculobullous skin disease. A maternal cousin of the patient was diagnosed with XLP-1 and found to carry a deletion of the SH2D1A gene. SH2D1A deletion was also identified in our patient, which offered a possible explanation for his skin symptoms. Subsequent analysis showed that the deletion in both cousins was identical and involved the whole SH2D1A gene and a part of the adjacent ODZ1 gene. High phenotypic variability of XLP-1 observed in this family prompted us to analyze the genotype-phenotype correlation of 2 different-sized deletions involving SH2D1A and ODZ1 in 5 patients from 2 families, and we report the clinical and laboratory data on these individuals. Our findings illustrate the wide clinical variability of XLP-1, both inter- and intrafamilial, which may complicate the diagnosis of this condition. The comparison of phenotypes of our patients argues against a strong involvement of the ODZ1 gene in the skin disorder and other symptoms observed in our index patient. His hitherto not described severe skin condition extends the phenotypic range of XLP-1.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0031-4005 , 1098-4275
    Language: English
    Publisher: American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
    Publication Date: 2012
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1477004-0
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  • 4
    In: Cytometry Part A, Wiley, Vol. 87, No. 2 ( 2015-02), p. 145-156
    Abstract: Flow cytometric immunophenotyping has become essential for accurate diagnosis, classification, and disease monitoring in hemato‐oncology. The EuroFlow Consortium has established a fully standardized “all‐in‐one” pipeline consisting of standardized instrument settings, reagent panels, and sample preparation protocols and software for data analysis and disease classification. For its reproducible implementation, parallel development of a quality assurance (QA) program was required. Here, we report on the results of four consecutive annual rounds of the novel external QA EuroFlow program. The novel QA scheme aimed at monitoring the whole flow cytometric analysis process (cytometer setting, sample preparation, acquisition and analysis) by reading the median fluorescence intensities (MedFI) of defined lymphocytes' subsets. Each QA participant applied the predefined reagents' panel on blood cells of local healthy donors. A uniform gating strategy was applied to define lymphocyte subsets and to read MedFI values per marker. The MedFI values were compared with reference data and deviations from reference values were quantified using performance score metrics. In four annual QA rounds, we analyzed 123 blood samples from local healthy donors on 14 different instruments in 11 laboratories from nine European countries. The immunophenotype of defined cellular subsets appeared sufficiently standardized to permit unified (software) data analysis. The coefficient of variation of MedFI for 7 of 11 markers performed repeatedly below 30%, average MedFI in each QA round ranged from 86 to 125% from overall median. Calculation of performance scores was instrumental to pinpoint standardization failures and their causes. Overall, the new EuroFlow QA system for the first time allowed to quantify the technical variation that is introduced in the measurement of fluorescence intensities in a multicentric setting over an extended period of time. EuroFlow QA is a proficiency test specific for laboratories that use standardized EuroFlow protocols. It may be used to complement, but not replace, established proficiency tests. © 2014 International Society for Advancement of Cytometry
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 1552-4922 , 1552-4930
    URL: Issue
    Language: English
    Publisher: Wiley
    Publication Date: 2015
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2180639-1
    SSG: 12
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  • 5
    In: Cancers, MDPI AG, Vol. 13, No. 23 ( 2021-12-06), p. 6148-
    Abstract: Monitoring of minimal residual disease (MRD) by flow cytometry (FCM) is a powerful prognostic tool for predicting outcomes in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). To apply FCM-MRD in large, collaborative trials, dedicated laboratory staff must be educated to concordantly high levels of expertise and their performance quality should be continuously monitored. We sought to install a unique and comprehensive training and quality control (QC) program involving a large number of reference laboratories within the international Berlin-Frankfurt-Münster (I-BFM) consortium, in order to complement the standardization of the methodology with an educational component and persistent quality control measures. Our QC and quality assurance (QA) program is based on four major cornerstones: (i) a twinning maturation program, (ii) obligatory participation in external QA programs (spiked sample send around, United Kingdom National External Quality Assessment Service (UK NEQAS)), (iii) regular participation in list-mode-data (LMD) file ring trials (FCM data file send arounds), and (iv) surveys of independent data derived from trial results. We demonstrate that the training of laboratories using experienced twinning partners, along with continuous educational feedback significantly improves the performance of laboratories in detecting and quantifying MRD in pediatric ALL patients. Overall, our extensive education and quality control program improved inter-laboratory concordance rates of FCM-MRD assessments and ultimately led to a very high conformity of risk estimates in independent patient cohorts.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2072-6694
    Language: English
    Publisher: MDPI AG
    Publication Date: 2021
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2527080-1
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  • 6
    In: Cancers, MDPI AG, Vol. 14, No. 6 ( 2022-03-21), p. 1583-
    Abstract: Acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (AMKL) is a rare and heterogeneous subtype of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). We evaluated the immunophenotypic profile of 72 AMKL and 114 non-AMKL AML patients using the EuroFlow AML panel. Univariate and multivariate/multidimensional analyses were performed to identify most relevant markers contributing to the diagnosis of AMKL. AMKL patients were subdivided into transient abnormal myelopoiesis (TAM), myeloid leukemia associated with Down syndrome (ML-DS), AML—not otherwise specified with megakaryocytic differentiation (NOS-AMKL), and AMKL—other patients (AML patients with other WHO classification but with flowcytometric features of megakaryocytic differentiation). Flowcytometric analysis showed good discrimination between AMKL and non-AMKL patients based on differential expression of, in particular, CD42a.CD61, CD41, CD42b, HLADR, CD15 and CD13. Combining CD42a.CD61 (positive) and CD13 (negative) resulted in a sensitivity of 71% and a specificity of 99%. Within AMKL patients, TAM and ML-DS patients showed higher frequencies of immature CD34+/CD117+ leukemic cells as compared to NOS-AMKL and AMKL-Other patients. In addition, ML-DS patients showed a significantly higher expression of CD33, CD11b, CD38 and CD7 as compared to the other three subgroups, allowing for good distinction of these patients. Overall, our data show that the EuroFlow AML panel allows for straightforward diagnosis of AMKL and that ML-DS is associated with a unique immunophenotypic profile.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2072-6694
    Language: English
    Publisher: MDPI AG
    Publication Date: 2022
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2527080-1
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  • 7
    In: Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics, Elsevier BV, Vol. 201, No. 1 ( 2010-08), p. 52-56
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0165-4608
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Elsevier BV
    Publication Date: 2010
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 2004205-X
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  • 8
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 104, No. 11 ( 2004-11-16), p. 1078-1078
    Abstract: INTRODUCTION. There has been a controversy about the prognostic impact of myeloid antigens (MyAgs) in ALL. The issue has now regained significance since a monoclonal antibody (mAb) is available for clinical treatment, which is considered for AML as well as for ALL with CD33 expression. Previous studies on prognostic impact of MyAgs often combined the information on several MyAgs using logical OR or AND. Since regulation and mutual relationships of MyAg expression are unknown, a study on prognostic impact of each MyAg alone is needed. In addition, recent in vitro data showed a higher resistance for ALL blasts with MyAgs, contrasting with clinical studies showing no prognostic value of MyAgs. DESIGN. We evaluated the prognostic impact of CD33, CD13, CD15 and CD65 in uniformly treated Czech patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS. From 9/1996 to 10/2002, 343 children with ALL were enrolled in a nationwide study ALL BFM 95. In 327 patients (96%) immunophenotyping and molecular genetics was performed centrally in our reference labs. DNA index 1.16–1.6 determined hyperdiploidy. Prednisone good responders (PGR) with WBC at diagnosis & lt;20000/uL and age 1–6yrs were assigned into standard risk group (SRG). High RG (HRG) corresponded to prednisone poor response (PPR) or no remission at day 33 or BCR/ABL or MLL/AF4 fusions. Remaining patients were in the intermediate RG (IRG). For identification of independent RFs (RFs) multivariate analysis using Cox’s proportional hazard regression was performed. The primary end point of follow up was relapse of the disease (52/327), death or treatment failure whichever occurred first. Comparisons of relapse free survival (RFS) for patients’ subgroups used log-rank statistics and Kaplan-Meier life-table estimation. Spearman R coefficient assessed relations among individual parameters and prognosis. RESULTS. Among MyAgs, only CD33 was found to be an independent RF only in B-cell precursor (BCP) ALL (n=283) but not in T ALL (n=44), therefore we excluded T ALL from further analyses. CD33 was shown to be the only independent RF among MyAgs. RFS was extremely significantly worse in BCP ALL patients with CD33 expression at or above 10% out of blasts (p=0.00004) Figure Figure or 20% (p=0.00327). Patients with BCP ALL with CD33 at or above 10% had poorer RFS in separate analyses for: IRG, SRG, PGR, TEL/AML1+ and hyperdiploid (always p & lt;0.05). In HRG, as well as in PPR we failed to prove prognostic significance of CD33 expression. Furthermore, combining the information on CD33 expression with other MyAgs reduced the level of significance. DISCUSSION. In contrast to several previous reports, we prove that CD33 is a highly significant prognostic factor in childhood BCP ALL. This was enabled by using the same clone of mAb in one laboratory throughout the study and by not combining results of several MyAgs into composite criteria. Subsets of ALL patients with CD33 expression may benefit from anti-CD33 immunotherapy. Supported by a grant IGA MZCR7430–3.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2004
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1468538-3
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 80069-7
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    American Society of Hematology ; 2008
    In:  Blood Vol. 112, No. 11 ( 2008-11-16), p. 3358-3358
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 112, No. 11 ( 2008-11-16), p. 3358-3358
    Abstract: In t(8;21) acute myeloid leukaemia (AML), the leukaemogenesis is supposed to be promoted by interference with expression of AML1 target genes. Repressor complex associated with AML1/ETO fusion protein recruits class I histone deacetylases (HDAC). Valproic acid (VPA) was found to have an extensive effect on AML blasts, via inhibition of class I HDAC. It was shown previously that VPA treatment disrupts the AML1/ETO-HDAC1 complex from AML1 promoter thus leading to apoptosis at different cell lines. However, there is still lack of in-depth morphological and immunophenotypical proof of the hypothesized restoration of differentiation after treatment with VPA. Although very little is known about AML1 target genes, it was shown that AML1 protein binds to promotor region of IL-3 and PU.1 and regulates their expression. There are also reports demonstrating possible candidate target genes of AML1 transcription factor (BPI, IGFBP7). We aimed to characterize the differentiation effect of VPA on AML1/ ETO-positive leukaemic cells and to determine the expression pattern of selected genes. Kasumi-1 (AML1/ETO-positive) cell line and MV4-11 (MLL/AF4-positive) cells were treated with VPA (0,5 mM and 1,0 mM concentrations) and examined by flow cytometry, morphological evaluation and qRT-PCR. Paediatric patients’ bone marrow samples (AML1/ ETO-positive) from the time of diagnosis were taken for in vitro experiment. We optimised the method of patients’ samples cultivation using conditioned medium with cytokines (IL6, FLT3 ligand, TPO, SCF) and we treated leukaemic cells with VPA. We examined immunophenotype and cell cycle of these samples after 24 and 48 hours of cultivation. We show that treatment of AML1/ETO-positive myeloid cells with HDACi VPA resulted in decreased expression of early myeloid progenitor antigens (CD33/34/117) and increased expression of antigens typical for differentiated myeloid cells (CD11a/11b). Cell morphology, nucleolar morphology and cytochemistry evaluation indicated the maturation process and decreased proliferation activity. All these phenomenons were not observed in control MLL/AF4-positive myeloid cells. We quantified the level of expression of selected genes (PU.1, C/EBPalpha, BPI, IGFBP7) and we observed the increase of genes expression after VPA treatment in AML1/ETO-positive cells. In VPA treated AML1/ETO-positive cells PU.1 increased expression 6.2 times (p 〈 0.001), C/EBPalpha 3 times (p 〈 0.001), BPI 2.6 times (p 〈 0.001) and IGFBP7 7 times (p 〈 0.001). Different situation occurred in MLL/AF4-positive cell line, where PU.1 conversely decreased expression 2.5 times (p=0.01), IGFBP7 decreased 2.4 times (p=0.01) and the expression of C/EBPalpha and BPI remained unchanged (p=0.32 and p=0.75) after VPA treatement. Samples recovered from patientś bone marrow reacted differently to VPA therapy. The first patient increased the expression of HLA-DR (p=0.04) and CD11b (p=0.02) and at the same time decreased the expression of CD38 (p=0.006) and CD117 (p=0.03) surface markers, which represents the signs of differentiation. The second patient’s sample presented with expression of HLA-DR (p=0.1) unchanged; expression of CD11b (p=0.05), CD38 (p=0.002), CD117 (p=0.04) and CD34 (p=0.02) decreased. The concentration of VPA used in our experiment seems to have strong cytotoxic effect on the other patient’s leukaemic cells, as they passed into the apoptosis, the amount of 10% of persistent blast cells was not sufficient for the analysis. Cell cycle examination confirmed the results of the experiment with cell lines; patientś samples treated with VPA decreased the proliferation and the number of cells undergoing apoptosis increased. Taken together, we provide a valid evidence of differentiation of AML1/ETO-positive cell line, demonstrated by flow cytometry and confirmed morphologically. This process goes hand in hand with the increase of the repressed genes expression as measured by qRT-PCR in contrast with non-CBF leukemic cells. Patients’ data are not completely in line with those experimental findings, as the flow cytometry analysis showed uneven changes in surface markers expression pattern. VPA induces differentiation and apoptosis; therefore it seems to be a promising drug in treatment of AML/ETO-positive paediatric AML. Supported by Grant Agency of Charles University 71/2006.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
    RVK:
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2008
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1468538-3
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 80069-7
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  • 10
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 114, No. 22 ( 2009-11-20), p. 1448-1448
    Abstract: Abstract 1448 Poster Board I-471 In acute leukemia (AL), some clinical symptoms may be caused by soluble factors secreted by AL cells into the bone marrow (BM) microenvironment. On the other hand, AL cells are often dependent on the microenviroment of the host, with most AL cells dying during first days after transferred to in vitro. It is not known whether soluble factors are responsible for some host-AL interactions since most of the attention is paid to the biology of the leukemic cells themselves rather than the soluble portion of BM microenvironment. We aimed at identifying proteins in BM plasma of children with lymphoblastic AL (ALL), which may be responsible for ALL aggressiveness or for microenvironment-mediated survival of ALL cells. We used proteomic techniques to compare BM plasma at the diagnosis of ALL with non-malignant controls (BM plasma from patients with no signs of malignant disease with a BM check-up more than one year after BM transplantation or healthy donor blood plasma). BM plasma and blood samples were analyzed by protein microarray and/or by two-dimensional electrophoresis (2D PAGE). Protein microarray enabled a simultaneous detection of 79 proteins per sample (mainly cytokines and chemokines). The aim of 2D PAGE was to compare the complex patterns of between ALL and controls and to search for differences among unknown or unexpected molecules. We tested 79 soluble proteins in patients (n=15) and control samples (BM plasma, n=9 and blood plasma, n=5) by protein microarray. We detected 23 proteins with a significantly different concentration in patients (p 〈 0.05). Of these, only 2 proteins TIMP-1 and LIF differed with a high level of significance after Bonferroni correction was applied (p 〈 0.00064). The other differences need to be confirmed or excluded in a validation cohort. We observed no difference between control blood and control BM plasma. Both LIF and TIMP-1 are likely to be produced by non-leukemic cells given the low level of expression by leukemic cells in expression profiling. Causal relationship between LIF and TIMP-1 expression, as well as their importance for cell “stemness” which have been proven in other systems, need to be confirmed in leukemia. Before 2D PAGE, BM plasma was immuno-depleted from 12 abundant proteins by affinity chromatography. This improved considerably the separation of proteins on 2D PAGE and increased the number of detectable minor plasma proteins with possible biologic importance. We identified 393 protein spots per gel. Of these, 16 proteins spots were significantly different between the BM plasma from ALL and controls. The differently expressed spots were identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF). The MALDI-TOF identified the concentration of haptoglobin to be increased in ALL, whereas hemoglobin alpha, hemoglobin beta, catalase, retinol binding protein, peroxiredoxin, ferritin, and carbonic anhydrase were identified as more abundant in controls. At the time of abstract submission, we confirmed elevated concentration of haptoglobin in patients by immuno-turbidometry (8 TEL-AML1, 12 hyperdiploid, 20 non-hyperdiploid or fusion gene ) and compared with 10 control samples. Ferritin concentration, on the other hand, was higher in control samples, as confirmed by Enzyme-linked imunoassay (ELISA). Presented data provide an insight into leukemic BM environment. The role of the observed differences in soluble factors in leukemia pathogenesis, diagnostic and therapeutic potentialis being investigated. Supported by : GAUK 7543/2007, IGA MZCR NR/9531-3 Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2009
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1468538-3
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 80069-7
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