RÉSUMÉ
We investigated the differences between the serum proteomic spectral characteristics of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients and those of healthy people. We collected peripheral blood serum samples from 62 AML patients and 15 healthy controls. After removing high-abundance proteins, low-abundance serum proteins were separated using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis to identify differences between AML patients and healthy people. We investigated the different protein dots by mass fingerprint analysis, and evaluated the results using the Masort retrieval program provided by the MSDB protein bank. To further investigate the relationship between standard chemotherapy treatment efficacy and differences in protein patterns, we divided 21 patients into two groups (A and B) according to the efficacy of standard chemotherapy. Compared with the healthy cases, the AML patients demonstrated significant abnormal expression in 14 proteins (P < 0.05); α1-trypsin inhibitor (P < 0.01), prealbumin (P < 0.01), apolipoprotein E (P < 0.010), and apolipoprotein A-IV (P < 0.01) expression decreased, whereas haptoglobin HP2 (P < 0.05), serum exogenous lectin (P < 0.05), H factor homologue protein (P < 0.05), and serum amyloid A1 (P < 0.01) expression increased. Further stratified analysis revealed that patients with high serum lectin expression had poor outcomes. The study revealed various proteins with differential expression levels in the peripheral blood of AML patients, and the difference in serum lectin expression is related to the efficiency of standard chemotherapy. Therefore, these proteins are potential diagnosis markers or prognostic indicators of AML.