Transient and persistent expansions of large granular lymphocytes (LGL) and NK‐associated (NKa) cells: the Yorkshire Leukaemia Group study
- 12 March 1993
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in British Journal of Haematology
- Vol. 83 (3) , 504-515
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2141.1993.tb04678.x
Abstract
A survey of 870 different adult blood samples (primarily from patients with non-haematological disorders) found that 269 (31%) had increased proportions (> 25%) and/or absolute numbers (> 1.0 x 10(9)/l) of morphologically-defined large granular lymphocytes (LGL), and/or phenotypically-defined NK-associated (NKa) cells. Of these, 112 were re-analysed at least 6 months after initial presentation and were classified as 'persistent' (92/112) or 'transient' (20/112) according to whether or not the original abnormality was still present. Lymphocyte counts in most patients with persistent abnormalities were within normal limits (18/92) or slightly increased (68/92), with only six having a lymphocytosis exceeding 10.0 x 10(9)/l. With the exception of five persistent LGL expansions in which the granular lymphocytes did not express NKa determinants (designated LGL+NKa-), the remaining 87 cases could be phenotypically grouped according to their primary abnormality as CD8+NKa+ (n = 33), CD4+ NKa+ (n = 14), CD8dim+NKa+ (n = 7) or CD8-NKa+ (n = 33). TCR genotypic studies in 58 patients showed that the 16 patients with rearranged TCR components were restricted to the CD8+NKa+ group and that, in most of these, the CD8+ fraction showed abnormal relative CD16/CD56 expression. Persistent neutropenia (n = 15) also appeared to be associated with primary abnormalities of CD8+NKa+ cells (12/15), with 10 of these additionally showing rearranged TCR genes. In contrast, persistently increased CD8dim+NKa+ and CD8-NKa+ components did not appear to phenotypically differ from their corresponding 'counterparts' in normal bloods or in patients with transient LGL/NKa+ abnormalities. This survey has therefore established that persistent LGL/NKa+ abnormalities are considerably more common than suggested in published work, that a high proportion of patients with expanded CD8+NKa+ components, with quite diverse clinical histories, show evidence of clonal lymphoid populations, and that the clonal nature of such disorders appears to be associated with abnormal NKa phenotypic patterns.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- A distinct large granular lymphocyte (LGL)/NK‐associated (NKa) abnormality characterized by membrane CD4 and CD8 coexpressionBritish Journal of Haematology, 1992
- Human NK Cells in Health and Disease: Clinical, Functional, Phenotypic and DNA Genotypic CharacteristicsLeukemia & Lymphoma, 1992
- Patterns of CD16 and CD56 expression in persistent expansions of CD3+NKa+ lymphocytes are predictive for clonal T‐cell receptor gene rearrangementsBritish Journal of Haematology, 1991
- Immunophenotypic Dissection of Normal Peripheral Blood NK Associated (NKa) Subpopulations by Flow Cytometry: Morphological Features and Relationships Between Membrane NKa (CD11b, CD 16, CD56 and CD57) arid T-cell (CD2, CD3, TCR, CD5, CD7, CD8 and CD38) Associated Determinant ExpressionLeukemia & Lymphoma, 1990
- Chronic B-Cell Malignancies in Patients with LymphocytosisLeukemia & Lymphoma, 1990
- Lymphoproliferative disease of granular lymphocytes in a patient with concomitant hepatitis B virus infection of CD4 lymphocytesJournal of Clinical Immunology, 1989
- Large Granular Lymphocyte LeukemiaMedicine, 1987
- Heterogeneity of large granular lymphocyte proliferations: morphological, immunological and molecular analysis in seven patientsBritish Journal of Haematology, 1987
- Chronic T cell lymphocytosis: a review of 21 casesBritish Journal of Haematology, 1984
- CHRONIC LYMPHOCYTIC LEUKÆMIA OF T-CELL ORIGIN IMMUNOLOGICAL AND CLINICAL EVALUATION IN ELEVEN PATIENTSThe Lancet, 1975