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Flower cells of leukemia

Flower cells of leukemia
#00012563
Author: Pretest Jain; Kumar Prabhash
Category: Lymphoma: Mature T and NK cell lymphoproliferations > Mature T-cell Leukemias > Adult T-cell Leukemia/Lymphoma
Published Date: 07/12/2012

A22-year-old female presented with 2 weeks of fever, anemia, generalized lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, and skin rashes. Her total leukocyte count was 306 x 109/L. Peripheral blood smear showed many atypical lymphocytes with petal-shaped nuclei like flowers as seen in the photograph. Peripheral blood immunophenotype noted negative markers for myeloid and B lymphoid lineage (CD10, CD19, CD3, CD5, CD7, cyto-CD3, TCR, CD16, CD56) and strongly positive for CD4 and CD25, and also CD2, which was atypical. Bone marrow aspirate and biopsy revealed involvement by acute leukemia. Serology for HTLV-1 was positive and serum calcium was normal. A diagnosis of adult T-cell leukemia was made. This leukemia is a neoplastic disease of CD4-positive T lymphocytes. Flower cells are described typically in HTLV-1–induced adult T-cell leukemia. They may also be seen in asymptomatic carriers of HTLV-1. Although convoluted nuclei with high total leukocyte count can occur in Se´zary syndrome, a typical petal shape of nuclei is usually not seen. In this patient, the clinical presentation and peripheral blood smear strongly indicated adult T-cell leukemia; HTLV-1 and the immunophenotype provided additional evidence. The patient received intensive chemotherapy but died of neutropenic fungal infection.