Abstract

To examine whether the percentage of myeloperoxidase (MPO)-positive blast cells is useful as a prognostic factor for acute myeloid leukemia (AML), cytochemical analysis of MPO was performed in 491 patients who were registered to the Japan Adult Leukemia Study Group-AML92 study. Patients were divided into two using the percentage of MPO-positive blast (high [>or=50%] and low (<50%)). Complete remission rates were 85.4% in the former and 64.1% in the latter (P=0.001). The overall survival (OS) and the disease-free survival (DFS) were significantly better in the high MPO group (48.3 vs 18.7% for OS, and 36.3 vs 20.1% for DFS, P<0.001, respectively). Multivariate analysis showed that both karyotype and the percentage of MPO-positive blast cells were equally important prognostic factors. The high MPO group still showed a better survival even when restricted to the intermediate chromosomal risk group or the patients with normal karyotype (P<0.001). The OS of patients with normal karyotype in the high MPO group was almost equal with that of the favorable chromosomal risk group. The percentage of MPO-positive blast cells is a simple and highly significant prognostic factor for AML patients, and especially useful to stratify patients with normal karyotype.

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