CORRELATION BETWEEN SERUM LEVEL OF SOLUBLE L-SELECTIN AND LEUKOCYTE COUNT IN CHRONIC MYELOID AND LYMPHOCYTIC-LEUKEMIA AND DURING BONE-MARROW TRANSPLANTATION
E. Zetterberg et J. Richter, CORRELATION BETWEEN SERUM LEVEL OF SOLUBLE L-SELECTIN AND LEUKOCYTE COUNT IN CHRONIC MYELOID AND LYMPHOCYTIC-LEUKEMIA AND DURING BONE-MARROW TRANSPLANTATION, European journal of haematology, 51(2), 1993, pp. 113-119
L-selectin is a glycoprotein which is one of three members in a family
of cell adhesion molecules called selectins. L-selectin is present in
distinct forms on both neutrophil granulocytes and lymphocytes, and i
t appears to play an important role in the early stages of leukocyte-e
ndothelial cell interaction. Activation of leukocytes leads to sheddin
g of the extracellular part of L-selectin which thus forms a soluble a
dhesion molecule, sL-selectin, which retains functional capacity and c
an be detected in serum. In the present study we have developed a spec
ific, sensitive sandwich ELISA to measure the serum level of sL-select
in in patients with hematological and infectious disorders. Three pati
ents with acute myeloid leukemia in remission and 1 patient with chron
ic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase were followed during bone marrow
transplantation and the level of sL-selectin was found to correlate cl
osely to the leukocyte counts with no detectable sL-selectin during pe
riods of severe leukopenia. In 11 patients with chronic phase chronic
myeloid leukemia and 13 patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia the
sL-selectin level was also found to correlate closely to the leukocyt
e count (R = 0.98; p = 0.001 and R = 0.83; p = 0.004 respectively). On
e CML patient with a leukocytosis of 385 x 10(9)/l was found to have a
n sL-selectin concentration 625 times above normal. Ten patients with
acute pneumonia were evaluated at diagnosis and at the time of follow-
up 4-8 weeks later. In all patients the initial sL-selectin level was
higher than at follow-up. However, no close correlation between sL-sel
ectin and leukocyte count or CRP (C-reactive protein) at the time of d
iagnosis was found. In summary, we have found that the sL-selectin lev
el in human serum closely correlates to the leukocyte count in both CM
L and CLL and during bone marrow transplantation.