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Journal of Nippon Medical School

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Amoeboid Neutrophils with Few Granules in Childhood Acute Precursor B Cell Leukemia

Takeshi Asano1, Kiyohiko Kaizu1 and Miho Maeda2

1Department of Pediatrics, Nippon Medical School Chiba Hokusoh Hospital
2Department of Pediatrics, Nippon Medical School


Background: We sometimes treat children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in whom neutrophil function is impaired at diagnosis. Transmission electron microscopy enables more accurate assessment by providing greater morphological detail. Using transmission electron microscopy, we have found 2 types of neutrophils in the peripheral blood of children: 1) amoeboid neutrophils, which are characterized as amoeboid cells with pseudopodia and few granules, and 2) round neutrophils with many granules at different stages and glycogen particles.
Aim: To assess the pathological role of amoeboid neutrophils, we investigated amoeboid neutrophils in the peripheral blood of children with leukemia.
Methods: Amoeboid neutrophils were examined in peripheral blood from 12 children with acute B-cell precursor lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL). Eight children with short stature served as healthy control subjects.
Results: The percentage of amoeboid neutrophils (per total neutrophil count) at onset or relapse of BCP-ALL was significantly higher than at remission. Children with short stature showed a lower percentage of amoeboid neutrophils than did children with acute leukemia.
Conclusion: The presence of fewer intracellular granules in amoeboid neutrophils suggests lower neutrophil activity. These results indicate that amoeboid neutrophils in patients with BCP-ALL have lower function at onset and relapse.

J Nippon Med Sch 2014; 81: 78-83

Keywords
amoeboid neutrophil, acute leukemia, childhood, electron microscopy

Correspondence to
Takeshi Asano, MD, Department of Pediatrics, Nippon Medical School Chiba Hokusoh Hospital, 1715 Kamagari, Inzai, Chiba 270-1694, Japan
July1364@nms.ac.jp

Received, July 10, 2013
Accepted, August 13, 2013