Acute myeloid leukemia with fusion gene: 'Pitfalls' in diagnosis.

Hematology

Department of Clinical Laboratory, Fuyang People's Hospital, Fuyang, People's Republic of China.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The text discusses a rare case of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) associated with basophilia, emphasizing the challenges in diagnosing this condition due to its rarity and poor prognosis.
  • The authors describe their use of various diagnostic methods, including morphological screening, immunotyping, FISH analysis, and RNA sequencing, to accurately identify the type of AML and to guide treatment decisions.
  • The study highlights the importance of advanced techniques such as NGS for detecting a broader range of genetic mutations, which can help avoid misdiagnosis and improve treatment outcomes for patients with hematologic malignancies.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with and basophilia is rare in hematologic malignancies with poor prognosis. Due to the small number of clinical cases, it is misdiagnosed and missed frequently, and it is necessary to explore laboratory detection for accurate diagnosis.

Methods: We report a case of AML with and basophilia by morphological screening, immunotyping with precise gating, interpretation of FISH results, and RNA transcriptome sequencing, thus laying the accurate diagnosis for clinical treatment.

Results: We confirmed a rare case of AML with rather than by morphological analysis, correct immunophenotyping via precise gating, rejecting one-sided view of FISH positive result and targeted RNA sequencing. Precise analysis and more advanced means avoid misdiagnosis and missed frequently. After accurate diagnosis, venetoclax and decitabine therapy were given instead of imatinib; eventually, the patient achieved a relatively good effect.

Discussion: Immunophenotype analysis is necessary to detect the expression of CD7 when encountering pseudo-lymphocytes with multilineage dysplasia and basophilia. FISH and RT-PCR are still indispensable means of diagnosis of fusion genes in hematologic malignancies but can only detect a limited number of known partner genes and fusion genes with known break points. NGS can achieve sequence analysis indiscriminately and detect all fusion transcripts theoretically, greatly improving the detection range. NGS sequencing is required for t(4;12)(q11;p13) in AML that are not accompanied by eosinophilia.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16078454.2024.2381170DOI Listing

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