Philadelphia chromosome (Ph) positive chronic myelocytic leukemia (CML): Frequency of additional findings

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Abstract

This article documents the cytogenetic findings in 79 patients with typical Ph-positive chronic myelocytic leukemia (CML). Direct preparations of bone marrow and/or peripheral blood of 46 males and 33 females were studied with different banding techniques. Seventy patients were studied during chronic phase. Three (4.3%) had unusual or complex translocations: t(6;22)(p21;q11), t(8;12;9;22)(p21;q21;q34;q11), and t(9;11;22)(q34;q13;q11). One (1.4%) had a +Ph, 1 (1.4%) had a +8, 1 (1.4%) had a del(3)(p13,p23), and 4 of 30 males (13.3%) showed loss of Y chromosome. Five of 8 cases studied during blast crisis had additional abnormalities. The +8 occurred in 4 cases, +10 and +19 each in 3 cases, +6, +9q+, and +13 each in 2 cases, and +5, +11, +14, +21, +Ph, i(17q), dic(1;9), and structural abnormalities of chromosomes #1, #5, #12, and #13 each in 1 case. Two cases studied in blast crisis alone had complex translocations leading to the Ph. Because it cannot be ruled out that these translocations are secondary, they were not included in the calculation of the frequency of atypical translocations.

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