From May 1985 to June 1990, 94 newly diagnosed cases of acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) were treated at the Institut Gustave-Roussy, of which four (4.3%) demonstrated mixed cell lineage. All these cases were morphologically and cytochemically considered as myelogenous leukemias according to the FAB classification. Immunophenotyping revealed in all four cases that the blast population had T-lymphoid (CD2, CD5, CD7 and cytoplasmic CD3) markers. In three of these cases, blast cells co-expressed myelogenous CD13 and CD33 markers. Cytogenetic analysis of the blast cells revealed a normal karyotype in all cases. The response to therapy has been poor. The two patients initially treated with a regimen usually used for AML did not achieve complete remission. By contrast, in three cases, complete remission was obtained with a drug combination used for lymphoblastic leukemia (in one case after failure of first line AML regimen). Only one patient remained disease-free for more than 18 months. We conclude that this form of leukemia is a distinct biological and clinical entity and may benefit form alternative therapy.