Chromosomal abnormalities have been analyzed in bone marrow cells of 61 patients with relapse of B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia. The cytogenetic results have allowed the structural stratification of the obtained karyotypes into ten groups of clones: normal, normal/near tetraploid, abnormal/normal, abnormal/near tetraploid/normal, evolution of clonal chromosome abnormalities; evolution of clonal chromosome abnormalities/normal, evolution of clonal chromosome abnormalities/near tetraploid/normal, independent clones, independent/normal clones; and independent/near tetraploid/normal clones. The identified structural rearrangements included translocations, deletions, insertions, and duplications; however, deletions with the involvement of bands 17p12, 13q12-q14, 11q14, and 11q23 dominated (63.8%). The application of i-FISH helped to show the presence of one to four abnormalities per karyotype. The identified cytogenetic and molecular cytogenetic rearrangements may signify a multilevel nature of the process underlying the development of resistant karyotypes. The results obtained under both methods have revealed the presence of a heterogenic cell population with possibly different levels of chemotherapy resistance.