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Acute Leukaemias CLASSIFICATION
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Acute leukaemias classification

Nov 02, 2014

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Atifa Ambreen

 
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Page 1: Acute leukaemias classification

Acute Leukaemias

CLASSIFICATION

Page 2: Acute leukaemias classification

French American British (FAB) Morphological classification Degree of maturation Lineage of the leukaemic blasts Histochemical stains Immunostains

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AML M0Minimal Differentiation No evidence of myeloid differentiation by

morphology and light microscopy. Immunological markers are required. <5%. Any age but most common in infants and

older adults.

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Medium sized blast cells with dispersed chromatin.

Round to indented nuclei. 1 or 2 nucleoli. Agranular cytoplasm <3% are SBB/MPO + CD34,CD33, HLA-DR +

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AML M 1Without Maturation >90% blast cells without significant

evidence of maturation to more mature neutrophils.

5- 10% Any age usually adults SBB/MPO >3% Auer Rods

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AML M2With Maturation >20% blasts with evidence of

maturation (>10% maturing cells of neutrophil lineage).

Auer Rods t(8;21) 10% Any age

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AML M3Acute Promyelocytic Leukaemia Abnormal Promyelocyte predominate Hypergranular or Typical APL. Microgranular (hypogranular) Type. Young Adults, 5- 10% Auer Rods (Faggot cells) DIC t(15;17)

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AML M4Acute Myelomonocytic Leukaemia Myelocytic and Monocytic differentiation. Myeloid maturation Older individuals 5- 10% Inv16 Monoblasts are nonspecific esterases + Myeloblast SBB +

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AML M 5Acute Monocytic Leukaemia 80% or more of the leukaemic cells are

monocytic lineage ( monoblasts, promonocytes and monocytes)

10% Older age Organ involvement (CNS, Gum

hyperplasia, Skin) Nonspecific easterase +

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AML M6Acute Erythroleukaemia Dyplastic erythroid precursors >50% erythroid precursors in the entire

nucleated cell population and >20% myeloblasts in the non-erythroid cell population.

<5% Therapy related SBB/MPO -

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AML M7Acute Megakaryoblastic Leukaemia 20% blasts of which at least 50% are of

megakaryocyte lineage Uncommon Cytopenias often thrombocytopenia SBB – Immunostains Myelofibrosis

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