Abstract

Pretreatment blood smears of adult patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia were examined for neoplastic cells showing nuclear radial segmentation (RS). RS was present in 6 of 7 patients with immunologically proven T-cell leukemia, but not in 11 patients whose leukemic cells lacked T-cell markers. Electron microscopic studies of neoplastic cells showed multiple nuclear indentations and abundant cytoplasmic microfilaments and microtubuli in connection with pericentriolar dense material. RS formation was decreased in 1 patient after chemotherapy with a vincristine-containing regimen, while the white cell count remained unchanged. Radial segmentation (RS) of leukocyte nuclei is a well-known phenomenon, which is observed ex vivo (Rieder cells), and can be induced in vitro. Convoluted or multilobulated nuclei in lymphoid neoplasms are similar to RS nuclei both with regard to their structure and their sensitivity to spindle-blocking drugs. We propose that the nuclear alterations observed in a variety of different T-cell neoplasms are identical with RS, and suggest that RS might be a morphological marker for subsets of lymphoproliferative disorders of T-cell origin.

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