Abstract

Recent studies in multiple myeloma indicate that molecules associated with different haematopoietic lineages may be expressed aberrantly by myeloma cells. In order to investigate this phenomenon further, we studied the immunophenotype of bone marrow cells from 21 patients with multiple myeloma using a panel of monoclonal antibodies against T,B, myelomonocytic, and natural killer (NK)-cell antigens. Leu-19/NKH1 (CD56), a molecule identical to N-CAM, which is normally expressed by neuroectodermal and NK cells, was found in 13 patients (62%). Dual-parameter flow cytometry was used to correlate N-CAM positivity with DNA aneuploidy or cytoplasmic immunoglobulin expression as markers of myeloma cells. When N-CAM was found positive, other haematopoietic antigens were expressed only in three out of 13 cases (23%). In contrast, myeloma cells not expressing N-CAM frequently exhibited pre-B cell markers, myeloid antigen, and HLA-DR, respectively (seven out of eight cases, 88%). Six out of eight N-CAM-negative myelomas were of the IgG lambda isotype, otherwise no clearcut association with basic clinical and laboratory parameters was noted. We conclude that N-CAM expression is a common finding in multiple myeloma. Whether its expression and the observed antigenic heterogeneity is just a manifestation of malignancy or N-CAM may play a role in the biology of multiple myeloma regarding tumour cell spread, remains to be explained.

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