Abstract

Granulocyte/macrophage colony-forming unit (CFU-gm) formation was studied simultaneously in bone marrow and peripheral blood of 52 previously untreated adult patients with acute non-lymphocytic (ANLL) and 36 with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). They were followed during induction therapy at monthly intervals while in remission and in 19 ANLL and 22 ALL cases, until relapse. Patients showing a decreased colony number in the marrow but normal or increased colony numbers in the peripheral blood had a high probability of entering remission. Non-responding patients displayed an opposite pattern. The higher the degree of marrow repopulation with granulocytic progenitor cells after induction treatment, the longer remission duration and survival for ANLL patients and the longer survival for ALL patients. CFU-gm formation returned to normal in the early stages of complete remission, but then declined progressively. At ANLL and ALL relapse, colony growth was reduced markedly while cluster formation remained normal. The number of marrow colonies and clusters in ANLL were significantly higher at first and second relapse compared to the growth pattern at first presentation. A similar trend had been observed in ALL, suggesting a selection advantage.

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