Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) is rarely caused by the
A 61-year-old patient was referred to our hospital with 6-month history of low back pain and difficulty walking. Before this admission, spine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) conducted at another hospital revealed multiple abnormal signals in the left iliac bone and vertebral bodies spanning the thoracic (T11-T12), lumbar (L1-L4), and sacral (S1/S3) regions. This led to a provisional diagnosis of bone tumors with an unknown cause. On admission, complete blood count (CBC) test and peripheral blood smear revealed a slightly increased counts of monocytes. Immunohistochemical staining of both spinal and bone marrow (BM) biopsy revealed positive expression for CD117, myeloperoxidase (MPO), and lysozyme. BM aspirate showed a significant elevation in the percentage of promyelocytes (21%), which were morphologically characterized by round nuclei and hypergranular cytoplasm. Multiparameter flow cytometry of BM aspirate revealed that blasts were positive for CD13, CD33, CD117, and MPO. Through the integrated application of chromosome analysis, fluorescence
In the present study, we report the clinical features and outcome of a rare APL patient characterized by a cryptic