barrett w. dick, m.d. director, hematology laboratories memorial medical center springfield. il...

54
LEUKOPOIESIS NORMAL AND ABNORMAL Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois School of Medicine June, 2000

Upload: julie-tull

Post on 28-Mar-2015

216 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

LEUKOPOIESISNORMAL AND ABNORMAL

Barrett W. Dick, M.D.Director, Hematology Laboratories

Memorial Medical CenterSpringfield. IL

 Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine

 Southern Illinois School of Medicine 

June, 2000 

Page 2: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Evolution of White Cells

Page 3: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Stem cell vs. Progenitor Cell

Stem cell: a primitive cell that is capable of both self renewal and differentiation. Upon differentiation, it can develop into myeloid or lymphoid lineages.

 Progenitor cell: a primitive cell beyond the stem cell stage that is committed to lineage differentiation

Page 4: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Evidence for Separate Common Progenitor Cell for B Lymphocytes and Myeloid Progenitor

Philadelphia chromosome is found in CML and a significant fraction of ALL, common B cell type.

Blast crisis in CML is frequently lymphoblastic, almost always B cell type.

Page 5: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Granulopoiesis

Page 6: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Myeloblast

Page 7: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Promyelocyte

Page 8: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Neutrophil Myelocyte

Page 9: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Neutrophil Metamyelocyte

Page 10: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Neutrophil band form - "band"

Page 11: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Neutrophil segmented form - "seg"

To be considered a segmented form, there must be at least one point where the the nucleus is segmented into two lobes with the connection between the containing no visible DNA (1). If there is visible DNA (2), it is not considered a segment.

Page 12: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Neutrophil Maturation

When a differential count is performed, traditionally, the device used for tallying the cells is arranged with the least mature cells on the left. This is the historic origin of the term "shift to the left" describing a relative increase in immature forms.

Page 13: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Lymphocyte Transformation

Page 14: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Small Lymphocyte

Page 15: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Transformed lymphocytes aka:"Reactive", "Large", "Variant" or "Atypical"

Page 16: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Blood Smear Examination

Page 17: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Performance of a White Cell Differential

Page 18: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Smear Examination

Thin Area

Feather Edge

Page 19: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Performance of a White Cell Differential - General Principles

• Scan at low power:o Identify appropriate thin areao Evaluate quality of smear

• High power oil- 50X or 100X:o Scan for abnormal cells and make a qualitative

assessmento Perform 200 cell differentialo Rescan to confirm that differential is an accurate

representation

Page 20: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Confidence Interval for Manual Differentials

• On a 1-200 cell manual differential, if a cell type is reported as:o "50%", the 95% C.I. is ~40% - 60% .o ‘1%’, the C.I. is ~0-8% .

• A statistically meaningful differential - 1000 cell differential required but not practical

• Conclusions:o Scanning the smear for abnormalities is more

important than the diffo Absolute counts from the machine are more accurate

Page 21: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Exceptions to the Absolute Counts "Rule"

• % Segs compared % Bands - Ratio of the two defines a "left

shift"

• % Mono’s - Relative monocytosis is important in some

clinical situations

o Agranuloctosis/neutropenia- Monocytosis frequently

predicts bone marrow recovery

o Relative or absolute monocytosis is a frequent finding

in myelodysplastic syndromes

Page 22: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Absolute Counts Define Cytoses or Cytopenias

Page 23: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Wbc Normal Ranges (cells/cumm)

• Neutrophils: 1500-6500 (Caucasians)

800-1200 (African subpopulation

• Lymphocytes: 1500-3000

• Monocytes: <1000

• Eosinophils: <700

• Basophils: <200

• Seg/Band Ratio: 5-6:1

• Relative Monocytes: <10%

Page 24: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Principles of Blood Smear Examination

• A 200 cell differential is a semi-quantitative estimate of the actual diff because the sampling error is very high - you are looking at a very small sample of a very large population

• When a differential is reported, what it should mean is that an experienced individual has examined that smear and, other than what was reported, no significant abnormalities were seen

• In practice, because of forced cutbacks in staffing, this currently is unlikely to be the case in most institutions

• Conclusion: You better learn to examine blood smears

Page 25: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Normal Wbc Found in Peripheral Blood

Page 26: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Segmented Neutrophil

Page 27: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Neutrophil Segmented Form

Page 28: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Eosinophil

Page 29: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Basophil

Page 30: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Basophil

Basophil granules are very soluble. In this example they are partially dissolved and are easily mistaken for toxic granules in a neutrophil. The background cytoplasm in a basophil is gray in contrast to the salmon-pink color in a neutrophil

Page 31: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Small Lymphocyte

Page 32: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Large Transformed Lymphocyte

In a normal blood smear, 15-17% of the lymphocytes may be large lymphocytes.

Page 33: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Large Granular Lymphocyte

Frequently, but arbitrarily included as reactive lymphocytes. The granules identify them as "killer" cells.,

Page 34: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Large granular lymphocytes- "LGL’s"

• There are at least two distinct subclasses of killer cells

o ADCC: antibody dependent cytotoxic cells; a subclass of CD8 cells. Require the presence of an antibody to be functional

o Natural killer cells: do not require the presence of an antibody

Page 35: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Monocyte

Page 36: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Monocyte

Reactive Lymphocyte Vs. Monocyte

• Bluish cytoplasm • Granules few and

larger • Indistinct

chromatin, more intensely stained

• Muddy blue-gray cytoplasm

• Many small azurophilic granules, barely visible

• "Ropy" chromatin

Page 37: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Variations in Normal Wbc

Page 38: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Neutrophil with Toxic Granules

Page 39: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Neutrophil band with Toxic Granules

Page 40: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Neutrophil with Dohle Body

Dohle Bodies are condensations of cytoplasmic RNA, stain blue-gray, and have the same significance as toxic granulation.

Page 41: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Neutrophil with Dohle Body

Page 42: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Hypersegmented Neutrophil

Hypersegmented neutrophils are classically associated with megaloblastic processes. However, they are commonly present when there is a neutrophilia. Rarely, it is a hereditary abnormality.

Page 43: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Hypersegmented Neutrophil in Megaloblastic Anemia

Page 44: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Transformed lymphocytes aka:"Reactive", "Large", "Variant" or

"Atypical"

Page 45: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Abnormal WBC

Page 46: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Myeloblasts, Auer Rod

Page 47: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Lymphoblasts, Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia

Lymphoblasts are usually smaller than myeloblasts and frequently have little or no visible cytoplasm.

Page 48: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Myelocyte - Eo/Baso?

Abnormal myelocyte frequently interpreted as having both eosinophil and basophil granules. Most likely this is a normal eosinophil myelocyte with primary granules. In either case the significance is they are virtually only seen in the blood in chronic myeloproliferative disorders.

Page 49: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Pelger-Huet Anomaly

The Pelger-Huet anomaly can be either hereditary or acquired. The main features are exaggerated nuclear clumping and hyposegmetation. The latter manifests itself as "increased " band counts.

Page 50: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Pseudo Pelger-Huet Anomaly

Cells that look metamyelocytes are almost never found in the hereditary form.

Page 51: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Hypogranular Neutrophils

The color of normal neutrophils is due to their granules. When they are poorly granulated they appear gray which is the normal cytoplasmic color.

Page 52: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Sezary's Syndrome Cutaneous T-cell Lymphoma

The "cerebriform" nucleus is characteristic of some T cellleukemia/lymphomas

Page 53: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Hairy Cell Leukemia

Page 54: Barrett W. Dick, M.D. Director, Hematology Laboratories Memorial Medical Center Springfield. IL Clinical Professor, Pathology and Medicine Southern Illinois

Infectious Organisms

Intracellular organisms in HIV patients, Histoplasma on the left,suspected Cryptosporidium on right.