Hruban R H, Kuhajda F P, Mann R B
Department of Pathology, The Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland.
Am J Clin Pathol. 1987 Nov;88(5):578-88. doi: 10.1093/ajcp/88.5.578.
Four cases of acute myelofibrosis are contrasted to three cases of acute megakaryocytic leukemia. The cases were clinically indistinguishable. Light microscopic examination of hematoxylin and eosin-stained bone marrow biopsy specimens from the cases of acute myelofibrosis showed a trilinear proliferation of mature and immature hematopoietic cells, increased numbers of mature magakaryocytes, and marked fibrosis. In contrast, the blast cells in the cases of acute megakaryocytic leukemia showed a continuous spectrum of differentiation from small blasts to megakaryoblasts. Immunoperoxidase staining showed the blast cells in all three cases of acute megakaryocytic leukemia to be strongly positive for Factor VIII, a marker of megakaryocytic differentiation. These same blasts did not stain with markers of myelomonocytic (lysozyme), lymphocytic (Hle), and myeloid (Leu-Ml) differentiation. In contrast, the blast cells in all four cases of acute myelofibrosis were Factor VIII, Hle, and Leu-Ml negative but did occasionally stain with anti-lysozyme.