| Literature DB >> 33106467 |
Simon Schlegel1,2, Henning Hamm3, Alexandra Reichel3, Hermann Kneitz3, Karen Ernestus4, Oliver Andres5, Verena G Wiegering6, Matthias Eyrich6, Matthias Wölfl6, Paul-Gerhardt Schlegel6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND Neonatal acute leukemia is a rare condition. Little is known about its incidence and outcomes, and treatment options have not been standardized. CASE REPORT A 3-day old, apparently healthy male newborn was referred to the pediatric intensive care unit with multiple violaceous macules and a few papules on his face and upper trunk. After initial spontaneous regression, the lesions reappeared. Skin biopsy and bone marrow aspirate revealed a diagnosis of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). ALL induction therapy was initiated on day 24, resulting in morphological remission at the end of induction therapy. ALL chemotherapy was guided by sequential PCR-based monitoring of minimal residual disease (MRD). The patient received a transplant from an unrelated HLA high-resolution matched (10/10 loci) permissive donor. He was followed-up after transplant conducted by sequential PCR-based measurements of MRD in bone marrow. CONCLUSIONS Neonatal leukemia often presents as congenital skin lesions known as blueberry muffin rash. ALL induction therapy was started at the end of the neonatal period. Treatment was well-tolerated and effective. Early donor search and PCR-MRD guided treatment surveillance can help to achieve and maintain molecular remission.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33106467 PMCID: PMC7603802 DOI: 10.12659/AJCR.927153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Case Rep ISSN: 1941-5923
Figure 1.(A, B) Skin lesions on post-partum day 3, showing multiple purple-to-violaceous, nonblanchable macules several millimeters in size on the patient’s face, with only a few lesions being slightly elevated.
Figure 2.Skin biopsy: (A) Dermal lymphoblastic infiltrate (arrow), H&E stain; (B, C) Immunohistochemistry, showing (B) positive staining of lymphoblasts for the B cell marker PAX5; and (C) weak nuclear expression of TdT by lymphoblasts.
Figure 3.Flow cytometry of bone marrow: Phenotype overlay of blast cells at the time of diagnosis characterized as CD19+, CD22low, CD10– (A, B; blast population in light blue ) and regenerating normal B cell compartment (A, B; normal B cell population in purple ) just prior to allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Lymphoid cells were gated in a SSC/FSC plot. The phenotype of the blast population was characterized by additional flow cytometric markers as CD45low, CD79α+, CD20–, CD34–, TdT– (data not shown). Results of phenotyping were confirmed by the national ALL reference laboratory.