The prognostic significance of cell surface antigens associated with lymphoid and myeloid lineage differentiation on the blasts of children with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) was evaluated. Leukemic blasts from 176 patients enrolled on Childrens Cancer Study Group Protocol 213 determined to have AML by standard morphologic and cytochemical criteria were immunophenotyped. Cell surface antigens associated with myeloid differentiation were found on blasts from 88.1% of patients (CD15, 44%; CD33, 65%; CD36, 53%; glycoprotein Ib, 9.3%). However, blasts from 30.7% of patients expressed surface antigens thought to be specific for lymphoid lineage differentiation (CD2, 9.4%; CD5, 2.7%; CD19, 34.5%; CD20, 0.8%). In addition, CD34, a glycoprotein found on immature cells of both myeloid and lymphoid lineages, was expressed on the blast cells of 48.2% of patients. With the exception of the lymphoid lineage nonspecific antigen CD4, no correlation was found between white blood cell count at diagnosis, age, and French-American- British morphology, and the expression of any of the lymphoid- or myeloid-associated cell surface antigens studied. Nor was the expression of these antigens prognostically significant with respect to response to induction therapy, death during induction, survival, event- free survival, or survival/event-free survival following remission induction. Multivariate analysis showed that CD4 expression was not an independent predictor of outcome. Thus, this prospective study suggests that expression of lymphoid-associated cell surface antigens as well as myeloid-associated antigens by childhood AML blasts lacks prognostic significance.

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