Bone marrow infiltration pattern in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia is related to immunoglobulin heavy-chain variable region mutation status and expression of 70-kd ζ-associated protein (ZAP-70)

2006 ◽  
Vol 37 (9) ◽  
pp. 1153-1161 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulrika Schade ◽  
Oliver Bock ◽  
Sylke Vornhusen ◽  
Anna Jäger ◽  
Guntram Büsche ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 4579-4579
Author(s):  
Bella Biderman ◽  
Eugene Nikitin ◽  
Tatiana Sergienko ◽  
Alexandra Bakun ◽  
Irina Taras ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 4579 Introduction. Mutation status of the heavy chain variable region genes is known as an important factor in long-term prognosis in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL). A more detailed study of the gene sequences of immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgVH) led to the discovery of stereotyped antigen receptors (SAR) - receptors that have the same set of VH-, D- and JH- genes used. SARs have been found almost in a quarter of all B-CLL cases. Since this study there have been no data available concerning VH-gene usage and SARs in Russian and Belarusian B-CLL patients. Patients and methods. DNA or cDNA was amplified in 6 separated reactions using primers specific for VH-families, and a consensus JH primer [Campbell et al. 1992] or primer sets recommended by the BIOMED-2 [van Dongen et al. 2003]. PCR products were sequenced using family-specific primers and Big Dye Terminator v3.1 kit (Applied Biosystems). Sequences were analyzed with IgBlast (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/igblast). 98% homology cutoff was used to discriminate between mutated and unmutated cases. Results. Total of 547 patients with B-CLL where analyzed; 192 patients with mutated IgVH-genes (35%) and 355 patients with unmutated ones (65%). We have identified 65 stereotyped receptors (SARs) in 198 of 491 Russian patients (40%). Twenty one SARs (confirmed) appeared in more than 3 patients (110 out of 198, 55%), 44 SARs (potential) found in 2 patients (88 out of 198 cases, 45%). The vast majority of confirmed SARs were found in the subgroup of patients without mutations in IgVH genes (95%). Among the potential SARs 15 pairs were from patients with and without mutations (34%), seven pairs from patients with mutations (16%) and 22 pairs from patients without IgVH mutations (50%). The most common SARs were: VH1–69/D3-3/JH6 (24 patients, 5%); VH1–69/D3–16/JH3 (8 patients); VH1–69/D2-2/JH6 (8 patients); VH1–69/D3–10/JH6 (6 patients). Among 56 Belarusian patients we have identified only 4 SARs, one confirmed SAR (4 cases) and 3 potential ones. Confirmed (VH1–69/D3-3/JH6) and one potential (VH1–69/D3–16/JH3) were also found in Russia while other two potential (VH1–69/D2–15/JH6 and VH2–5/D2-2/JH6) were not observed in Russia. Discussion. In Russia and Belarus, VH1–69 gene is found in 20% of all cases of B-CLL, and almost always (95%) in unmutated cases. This finding well correlates to the data obtained by [Kryachok et al. 2012] concerning high VH1–69 usage in Ukrainian patients. In other European countries, this gene is less common: about 14% of cases in Sweden, France and Spain, 11% in the UK and about 6–7% in Greece and Italy [Ghia et al. 2005; Tobin et al. 2004; Duke et al. 2003]. In all these countries, this gene is also prevalent in patients with unmutated VH-genes. Nordic countries are characterized by very frequent use of gene VH3–21 - 9%, while in Russia and the countries of central and southern Europe, it occurs at least 3 times less (about 3%), and was not found in Belarusian samples. This gene is also associated with poor prognosis of B-CLL, regardless of mutation status of IgVH genes. Interestingly, in Asia (China, Japan, Iraq) VH1–69 and VH3–21 genes are almost not observed [Nakamura et al. 1999; Farsangi et al. 2007; Lijuan Chen et al. 2008]. Narrowing of the repertoire of IgVH genes - specific feature of B-CLL indicatites that influence of antigen (at least in some cases) occurs during the development of the disease. Also, factors of genetic background as well as geographical environment could be important. It is possible that future treatment decisions will be based not only on the IgVH mutation status, but also on the characteristics of certain antigen receptor. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 209-218 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Pinto ◽  
Vittorina Zagonel ◽  
Antonino Carbone ◽  
Diego Serraino ◽  
Giuseppe Marotta ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (19) ◽  
pp. 5201-5210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiao-Jie Yan ◽  
Igor Dozmorov ◽  
Wentian Li ◽  
Sophia Yancopoulos ◽  
Cristina Sison ◽  
...  

Abstract Individual cytokines and groups of cytokines that might represent networks in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) were analyzed and their prognostic values determined. Serum levels of 23 cytokines were measured in 84 patients and 49 age-matched controls; 17 levels were significantly elevated in patients. Unsupervised hierarchical bicluster analysis identified 3 clusters (CLs) of highly correlated but differentially expressed cytokines: CL1 (CXCL9, CXCL10, CXCL11, CCL3, CCL4, CCL19, IL-5, IL-12, and IFNγ), CL2 (TNFα, IL-6, IL-8, and GM-CSF), and CL3 (IL-1β, IL-2, IL-4, IL-15, IL-17, and IFNα). Combination scores integrating expression of CL1/CL2 or CL1/CL3 strongly correlated (P < .005) with time-tofirst-treatment and overall survival (OS), respectively. Patients with the worst course had high CL1 and low CL2 or CL3 levels. Multivariate analysis revealed that CL1/CL2 combination score and immunoglobulin heavy chain variable region mutation status were independent prognostic indicators for time-to-first-treatment, whereas CL1/CL3 combination score and immunoglobulin heavy chain variable region mutation status were independent markers for OS. Thus, we identified groups of cytokines differentially expressed in CLL that are independent prognostic indicators of aggressive disease and OS. These findings indicate the value of multicytokine analyses for prognosis and suggest therapeutic strategies in CLL aimed at reducing CL1 and increasing CL2/CL3 cytokines.


2005 ◽  
Vol 23 (24) ◽  
pp. 5788-5794 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven Z. Pavletic ◽  
Issa F. Khouri ◽  
Michael Haagenson ◽  
Roberta J. King ◽  
Philip J. Bierman ◽  
...  

Purpose To determine the role of myeloablative conditioning and unrelated donor (URD) bone marrow transplantation in the treatment of patients with advanced B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). Patients and Methods A total of 38 CLL patients received a matched URD transplant using bone marrow procured by the National Marrow Donor Program. The median age was 45 years (range, 26 to 57 years), the median time from diagnosis was 51 months, and the median number of prior chemotherapy regimens was three. Fifty-five percent of patients were chemotherapy refractory and 89% had received fludarabine. Conditioning included total-body irradiation in 92% of patients. Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis consisted of methotrexate with cyclosporine or tacrolimus for 82% of patients. Results Twenty-one patients (58%) achieved complete response and six (17%) achieved partial response. Incidences of grades 2 to 4 acute GVHD were 45% at 100 days and incidences of chronic GVHD were 85% at 5 years. Eleven patients are alive and disease free at a median of 6 years (range, 3.0 to 9.0 years). Five-year overall survival, failure-free survival, disease progression rates, and treatment-related mortality (TRM) were 33%, 30%, 32%, and 38% respectively. Conclusion These data demonstrate that lasting remissions can be achieved after URD transplantation in patients with advanced CLL. High TRM suggest that myeloablative conditioning and HLA-mismatched donors should be avoided in future protocols, and it is mandatory to investigate transplant strategies with a lower morbidity and mortality, including the use of nonmyeloablative regimens.


2017 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 141-144
Author(s):  
S V Andreieva ◽  
K V Korets ◽  
O E Ruzhinska ◽  
I M Skorokhod ◽  
O G Alkhimova

Aim: The genetic mechanisms of resistance to chemotherapy in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma (B-CLL/SLL) are not clear. We aimed to determine the peculiarities of abnormal karyotype formation in bone marrow (BM) cells and peripheral blood (PB) blast transformed B-cells in relapse of B-CLL/SLL. Materials and Methods: Cytogenetic GTG banding technique and molecular cytogenetic in interphase cells (i-FISH) studies of BM cells and PB blast transformed B-lymphocytes were performed in 14 patients (10 males and 4 females) with B-CLL/SLL. Results: The results of karyotyping BM and PB cells revealed the heterogeneity of cytogenetic abnormalities in combined single nosological group of B-CLL/SLL. In PB B-cells, chromosome abnormalities related to a poor prognosis group were registered 2.5 times more often than in BM cells. Additional near tetraploid clones that occurred in 57.1% cases were the peculiar feature of BM cell karyotypes. Chromosomal rearrangements characteristic of the group of adverse cytogenetic prognosis were revealed in all cases from which in 2 cases by karyotyping BM cells, in 6 cases in PB B-cells and in 8 cases by the i-FISH method in BM cells, i.e. their detection frequency was 3 times higher in PB B-cells and 4 times higher when analyzing by i-FISH in BM cells. Conclusions: Mismatch in abnormal karyotypes in BM and PB B-cells by the presence of quantitative and structural chromosomal rearrangements may be indicative of simultaneous and independent processes of abnormal clone formation in the lymph nodes and BM hematopoietic cells. Accumulation the information about previously unidentified chromosomal rearrangements in relapse of the disease may help to understand the ways of resistance formation to chemotherapy.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 3093-3093
Author(s):  
Stefano Molica ◽  
Gaetano Vitelli ◽  
Giovanna Cutrona ◽  
Giovanna Digiesi ◽  
Rosanna Mirabelli ◽  
...  

Abstract We analyzed the correlation between well-established biological parameters of prognostic relevance in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia [CLL] (i.e, mutational status of the immunoglobulin heavy chain variable region [IgVH], ZAP-70- and CD38-expression) and serum levels of BAFF (B-cell activating factor of the TNF family) by evaluating the impact of these variables on the time to first treatment [TFT] in a series of 69 previously untreated Binet stage A B-cell CLL patients. By using a commercial ELISA (R & D Systems, USA) we found that higher levels of BAFF characterized more frequently patients with Rai stage 0 (P=0.008) and mutated IgVH (P=0.03). In contrast, peripheral blood lymphocytosis (P=0.06), serum β2-m (P=0.159), LDH (P=0.333) and percentage of ZAP-70-positive (P=0.242) or CD38-positive B-CLL cells (P=0.142) did not reflect circulating levels of BAFF. The relationship among various bio-pathological parameters, analyzed by the multiple correspondence analysis (MCA), showed two different clinico-biological profiles. The first, characterized by higher BAFF serum levels (i.e., > 336 ng/mL), presence of mutation in the IgVH, low percentage of CD38-positive B-CLL cells (< 30%) and low LDH was associated with a stable pattern of disease generally not requiring therapy. The second, defined by lower BAFF levels, absence of mutation in the IgVH, high percentage of CD38- positive B-CLL cells and high LDH was associated with a more progressive pattern of disease and a shorter TFT. After a median follow-up time of 35 months (range, 2–120 months) 26 (37.6%) out of 69 patients experienced a need for chemotherapy. Kaplan-Meier estimates of patientsTFT, plotted after searching the best cut-off for BAFF (i.e., 336 ng/mL), demonstrated that low BAFF concentration was associated with a shorter TFT (median TFT 36 months) while median was not reached by patients with BAFF levels higher than 336 ng/mL (P<0.0001). Along with lower serum levels of BAFF (Hazard Ratio [HR], 0.19; P<0.0001), the univariate Cox proportional hazard model identified absence of mutation in IgVH (HR, 0.17; P<0.0001), CD38-positivity (HR, 3.32; P=0.01) and lower platelet count (HR, 0.19; P=0.03) as predictor of shorter TFT. Finally, in multivariate analysis only mutational status of IgVH (HR, 0.25; P=0.007) and serum concentration of BAFF (HR, 034; P=0.04) affected significantly TFT. Our results indicate that in early B-cell CLL clinico-biological profile including among other parameters BAFF may provide a useful insight into the complex interrelationship of prognostic variables and semplify their interpretation. The possible presence of BAFF isoform in B-CLL could peraphs account for the unexpected correlation between low soluble BAFF levels and poor clinical outcome in patients with early disease.


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