1. Pre-analytical parameters associated with unsuccessful karyotyping in myeloid neoplasm: a study of 421 samples
- Author
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M.F.M. Santos, F.C.A.C. Oliveira, R.K. Kishimoto, D. Borri, F.P.S. Santos, P.V. Campregher, P.A.A. Silveira, N. Hamerschlak, C.L.P. Mangueira, F.B. Duarte, A.H. Crepaldi, M.A. Salvino, and E.D.R.P. Velloso
- Subjects
Cytogenetics ,Karyotype ,Leukemia ,Myelodysplasia ,Myeloproliferative disease ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Cytogenetics is essential in myeloid neoplasms (MN) and pre-analytical variables are important for karyotyping. We assessed the relationship between pre-analytical variables (time from collection to sample processing, material type, sample cellularity, and diagnosis) and failures of karyotyping. Bone marrow (BM, n=352) and peripheral blood (PB, n=69) samples were analyzed from acute myeloid leukemia (n=113), myelodysplastic syndromes (n=73), myelodysplastic syndromes/myeloproliferative neoplasms (n=17), myeloproliferative neoplasms (n=137), and other with conclusive diagnosis (n=6), and reactive disorders/no conclusive diagnosis (n=75). The rate of unsuccessful karyotyping was 18.5% and was associated with the use of PB and a low number of nucleated cells (≤7×103/µL) in the sample. High and low cellularity in BM and high and low cellularity in PB samples showed no metaphases in 3.9, 39.7, 41.9, and 84.6% of cases, respectively. Collecting a good BM sample is the key for the success of karyotyping in MN and avoids the use of expensive molecular techniques.
- Published
- 2019
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