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Original Articles: Clinical

Prognostic significance of CD8 and CD4 T cells in chronic lymphocytic leukemia

, , , , , , , , & show all
Pages 1829-1836 | Received 06 May 2010, Accepted 19 Jun 2010, Published online: 17 Sep 2010
 

Abstract

The prognostic value of the number of T cells and NK cells at diagnosis in CLL was analyzed in a cohort of 256 patients with CLL diagnosed between 1997 and 2007. Patients with leukemia showed elevated NK cells and T cell populations and CD4/CD8 ratio was inverted in 39.7% cases. Prognostic significance of lymphocytes was analyzed as a ratio of relative number of T cells to the size of the malignant monoclonal B-cell pool (T/NK cells:Malignant monoclonal B-cells ratio). Patients showed higher relative number of CD4 (p = 0.03), CD8 (p = 0.02), and NK cells (p = 0.01) in early Rai stage of disease. The multivariate Cox analysis identified the relative number of CD8 (hazard ratio (HR) = 1.464; p = 0.006) and CD4 T cells (HR = 0.091; p < 0.01) as independent predictors for survival. Additionally, patients with relative CD8 count > 0.074 or CD4 count > 0.1 had higher 10-year overall survival than patients with CD8 count ≤ 0.074 or CD4 count ≤ 0.1 (p = 0.002). Higher CD8 count was associated with significantly higher median time of survival of patients (149.33 vs. 82.06 months). Finally, association of the good prognostic factor of leukemia cells (CD38) with high relative CD8 count identified a group of patients with an indolent clinical course with an overall survival probability at 10 years of 95%.

Declaration of interest: This work was supported by the Spanish grants of Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias PI06/0841 and PS09/00420. AL holds a predoctoral fellowship from FYCIT of Asturias (BP06-99).

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