Chapter 3: Hemopoietic Neoplasia

Hemopoietic neoplasms include clonal proliferations of both lymphoid and myeloid cells (Fig. 3.1). Lymphoid neoplasms occur much more frequently than myeloid neoplasms in veterinary medicine. Myeloid refers to bone marrow-derived hemopoietic cells, with the exception of lymphocytes, as these may originate from tissues such as spleen, liver, thymus, and lymph nodes in addition to bone marrow. Accurate identification and classification of hemopoietic neoplasms aid the clinician in prognostication and in recommending appropriate treatment options for affected patients. Classification schemes for canine and feline hemopoietic neoplasms have generally been modified from human medicine. Hemopoietic neoplasms in other domestic animals have received less attention. Phenotyping of human hemopoietic neoplasms relies, in part, on sophisticated molecular and genetic tests which are not always available in veterinary medicine. However, great advances have been made in diagnosing, treating, and understanding the pathophysiology of these neoplasms in veterinary medicine, much to the credit of studies carried out by our counterparts in human medicine.

Figure 3.1 Hemopoietic NeoplasiaRBCs = red blood cells; WBCs = white blood cells; MKs = megakaryocytes LGL = large granular lymphocyte; ALL = acute lymphocytic/lymphoblastic leukemia CLL = chronic lymphocytic leukemia; T = T lymphocyte; B = B lymphocyte
Figure 3.1 Hemopoietic Neoplasia RBCs = red blood cells; WBCs = white blood cells; MKs = megakaryocytes LGL = large granular lymphocyte; ALL = acute lymphocytic/lymphoblastic leukemia CLL = chronic lymphocytic leukemia; T = T lymphocyte; B = B lymphocyte

 

Leukemia may be present with both lymphoid and myeloid neoplasms and generally refers to the presence of bone marrow-derived neoplastic cells in the peripheral blood. In other instances, where the primary hemopoietic neoplasm is a solid tumor (e.g. of lymphocytes, plasma cells, or mast cells) that develops extramedullary (outside the bone marrow) but releases neoplastic cells into the circulation, the term “leukemic phase” of the neoplasm is used. Confusion may occur with these definitions since, at the time of diagnosis, it is not always possible to determine whether the bone marrow or the mass represents the primary or metastatic site.

The presence of leukemia is relatively easy to determine when neoplastic cells occur in high numbers in the circulation, cell morphology is abnormal, and there is no physiologic explanation for the peripheral blood findings. Diagnosis can be more difficult when only low numbers of morphologically abnormal neoplastic cells are present in the peripheral blood. In other cases, the neoplastic cells may be proliferating in the bone marrow without being released into the peripheral blood, a situation that may be called preleukemia. Cytopenia of one or more non-neoplastic hemopoietic cell lines may accompany hemopoietic neoplasia and bone marrow examination is indicated, particularly if the cytopenia is unexplained because neoplastic cells are not identified in the peripheral blood.

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Veterinary Clinical Pathology: An Introduction Copyright © by Marion Jackson; Beverly Kidney; and Nicole Fernandez is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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