Abstract
AbstractEarly diagnosis and prompt initiation of appropriate treatment are critical for improving the prognosis of acute leukemia. Currently, acute leukemia is diagnosed by microscopic morphological examination of bone marrow smears and flow cytometric immunophenotyping of bone marrow cells stained with fluorophore-conjugated antibodies. However, these diagnostic processes require trained professionals and are time and resource-intensive. Here, we present a novel diagnostic approach using ghost cytometry, a recently developed high-content flow cytometric approach, which enables machine vision-based, stain-free, high-speed analysis of cells, leveraging their detailed morphological information. We demonstrate that ghost cytometry can detect leukemic cells from the bone marrow cells of patients diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and acute myeloid leukemia (AML), without relying on biological staining. The method presented here holds promise as a precise, simple, swift, and cost-effective method for the diagnosis of acute leukemia in clinical practice.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory