학술논문

Variations in the Content of CD34 + Cells in the Peripheral Blood of Cancer Patients Receiving Out-Patient Chemotherapy.
Document Type
Article
Source
Cytotherapy (Taylor & Francis Ltd). Jan1999, Vol. 1 Issue 1, p21-29. 9p.
Subject
*CANCER patients
*DRUG therapy
*ANTIGENS
*HEMATOPOIETIC system
*STEM cells
Language
ISSN
1465-3249
Abstract
Background The routine measurement of CD34 + cells in non-mobilized peripheral blood, using flow cytometry, has been limited by the technical difficulty of measuring the absolute numbers of rare populations of cells. Methods We studied the numbers of CD34 + cells in the peripheral blood of 55 normal volunteers and 476 cancer patients receiving chemotherapy, in a university out patient hematology/oncology clinic. Blood samples were stained with MAbs to CD34, CD45 and a DNA-specific dye, mixed with a defined number of fluorescent True-Count beads and analyzed by flow cytometry, using an automated acquisition and analysis program. Results The mean (± SD) CD34 + cell count among normal volunteers and previously untreated cancer patients were 1.4 ± 1.4 and 1.8 ± 2.8 CD34 + cells/μL, was stable among normal volunteers and patients receiving chemotherapy for prostate or breast cancer. In contrast, the CD34 + cell count among patients receiving dose-intensive weekly chemotherapy for the treatment of Hodgkin's disease or non-Hodgkin's lymphoma varied between 1 cell/μL to > 300 CD34 + cells/μL in a predictable and cyclic fashion. Discussion The study demonstrates that the routine measurement of the number of CD34 + cells in peripheral blood samples can be performed using an automated single platform program in an out-patient setting. The availability of an automated data acquisition and analysis program could facilitate standardization of counting CD34 + cells in clinical samples analyzed at different laboratory sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]