Medicina (Feb 2022)

Flow Cytometry and Molecular Techniques Could Complement Morphological Detection of Leukemic Infiltration in Ascitic Fluids: A Case Report

  • Inés Martínez-Alfonzo,
  • Daniel Láinez-González,
  • Laura Solán-Blanco,
  • Aida Franganillo-Suarez,
  • José I. Cornejo,
  • Amanda Garcia-Lopez,
  • Sara Martín-Herrero,
  • Tamara Castaño-Bonilla,
  • Rocío Salgado-Sánchez,
  • Teresa Arquero-Portero,
  • María J. Cortti-Ferrari,
  • Pilar Llamas-Sillero,
  • Juan M. Alonso-Dominguez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina58020264
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 58, no. 2
p. 264

Abstract

Read online

Extramedullary involvement of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is infrequent, and ascitic infiltration is even more unusual. We present a case of a 48-year-old woman diagnosed with NPM1-mutated AML that debuted with ascites, for which morphological studies of the ascitic fluid did not detect leukemic infiltration, maybe due to technical problems in the sample preparation. Multiparameter flow cytometry (MFC) detected a blast population compatible with AML, and allele-specific PCR detected NPM1-mutated transcripts. Body fluid infiltrations are an infrequent initial manifestation or sign of progression in AML. As far as we know, this is the first reported case of an NPM1-mutated AML that debuted with ascites, and also the first description of the utilization of molecular techniques to detect the leukemic origin of the ascites. This case highlights that, given that allele-specific PCR and MFC increase the sensitivity of morphological studies, these techniques should be routinely applied in the study of any kind of effusion detected in an AML patient.

Keywords