Test
From haematologyetc.co.uk
Background
Typical CLL can be diagnosed with some confidence using flow cytometry. CLL cells express low levels of B-cell receptor associated molecules (e.g. CD19, CD79B and sIg) together with CD5 and CD23 in typical cases. However, atypical cases are regularly encoutered and can cause diagnosic difficulty.
| Immunophenotype of CLL | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Major markers useful in CLL diagnosis | |||
| wk/ abs | wk/ abs | wk/ abs | wk/ abs |
| κ/λ | wk/ abs | Expect weak or absent restricted κ or λ expression | |
| FMC7 | Wk | May be expressed by atypical cases, generally absent | |
| CD5 | Mod | Characteristic of CLL, usually less strong than on T cells | |
| CD10 | - | Rare in CLL, consider FL if detected | |
| CD11C | Wk | Expressed in some cases, but tends to be weak | |
| CD19 | Wk/ mod | Expression is expected, but less strong than normal B cells | |
| CD20 | Wk | Expression is expected, but characteristically weak | |
| CD23 | Wk/ Mod | Characteristic of CLL, although can rarely be weak or absent | |
| CD43 | Wk/ Mod | Similar to CD200, may be helpful in some cases | |
| CD79a | Wk | Expression is expected, but characteristically weak | |
| CD103 | Not expressed by CLL, consider HCL if found | ||
| CD200 | Wk | Characteristically positive in CLL and negative in MCL | |
Pitfalls and atypical cases