Abstract

The frequency of metaphases without a Philadelphia chromosome was determined in mitogen-stimulated cultures of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and purified T lymphocytes (93% CD2-positive) from a patient with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) for 28 years. The PBMC cultures contained few Ph-negative cells (8%), but they constituted 92% of the metaphases in T cell cultures, indicating few if any Ph-positive T cells in the patient's circulation. The results demonstrate that T cells derived from the leukemic clone may fail to replace the non-neoplastic population even when CML arises in childhood and the patient survives for many years. This raises questions concerning the normal role of the bone marrow as a source of T cells after infancy, and also whether Ph-positive lymphocytes may be at a disadvantage for growth.

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