Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Flow cytometry test detects acute myeloid leukemia in dogs
By Stokol, Tracy et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2024·Department of Population Medicine and Diagnostic Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Flow cytometric-based detection of CD80 is a useful diagnostic marker of acute myeloid leukemia in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 7-year-old mixed-breed dog was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) after showing symptoms like lethargy and loss of appetite. Researchers found that a specific marker called CD80 was present on the tumor cells in about 72% of dogs with AML, making it a helpful tool for diagnosis. This marker was not found in dogs with other types of leukemia, which helps differentiate AML from other blood cancers. The study suggests that testing for CD80 can improve the accuracy of leukemia diagnoses in dogs, leading to better treatment options.
People also search for: dog leukemia symptoms · CD80 marker in dogs · acute myeloid leukemia treatment in dogs
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: CD80, a co-stimulatory molecule required for optimal T cell activation, is expressed on antigen-presenting cells, including monocytes and dendritic cells, in dogs and humans. We hypothesized that CD80 would be expressed on tumor cells in dogs from acute myeloid leukemia (AML) but not dogs with lymphoid neoplasms. METHODS AND RESULTS: We first evaluated the cellular staining pattern of a hamster anti-murine CD80 antibody (clone 16-10A1, ThermoFisher Scientific Cat# 17-0801-82, RRID: AB_469417) in blood and bone marrow aspirates from healthy dogs. Using flow cytometric analysis and examination of modified Wright's-stained cytologic smears of unsorted and flow cytometric or immunomagnetic bead-sorted leukocytes, we show that the antibody binds to mature and immature neutrophils and monocytes, but not lymphocytes or eosinophils, in blood and bone marrow. We then added the antibody to routine flow cytometric panels for immunophenotyping hematopoietic neoplasms in dogs. We found that the antibody labeled tumor cells in 72% of 39 dogs with AML and 36% of 11 dogs with acute leukemia expressing lymphoid and myeloid markers ("mixed lineage") but none of the dogs with B ( = 37) or T ( = 3) lymphoid neoplasms. A higher proportion of tumor cells in dogs with AML were labeled with the anti-CD80 antibody vs antibodies against other myeloid-associated antigens, including CD4 (36%, = 0.003), CD11b (44%), CD11c (46%), CD14 (38%, = 0.006) and CD18 (59%, clone YFC118). In contrast, antibodies against CD11b and CD11c bound to tumor cells in 8-32% of the lymphoid neoplasms. DISCUSSION: We show that CD80, as detected by antibody clone 16-10A1, is a sensitive and specific marker for AML and would be useful to include in flow cytometric immunophenotyping panels in dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39224452/