scholarly journals Automated Analysis of Multidimensional Flow Cytometry Data Improves Diagnostic Accuracy Between Mantle Cell Lymphoma and Small Lymphocytic Lymphoma

2012 ◽  
Vol 137 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Habil Zare ◽  
Ali Bashashati ◽  
Robert Kridel ◽  
Nima Aghaeepour ◽  
Gholamreza Haffari ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 4814-4814
Author(s):  
John Zhang ◽  
David Chin ◽  
Adam Anthony ◽  
Heather Bolton ◽  
Cheri Phillips ◽  
...  

Abstract The differential diagnoses of CD5 positive B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders mainly include chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma (CLL/SLL) and mantle cell lymphoma. Occasionally large cell and marginal zone lymphomas may also be CD5 positive. An accurate diagnosis effects patient management. The classical immunophenotype for chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma is CD19/CD5/CD23 positive FMC-7 negative cells with dim CD20 and dim light chain expressions, while mantle cell lymphoma is CD19/CD5/FMC-7 positive with bright CD20 and bright light chain expressions. The diagnosis of mantle cell lymphoma is usually confirmed by either immunostain for cyclin D1 or FISH study for t(11;14). In reality, immunostaining for cyclin D1 can be difficult and may show variable results in different laboratories and FISH study may not be readily available. Generally, when it comes to the diagnosis of lymphoma, immunohistochemical positivity of both CD5 and CD23 is almost pathognomic for chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma if no fresh tissue is saved for flow cytometry analysis. Flow cytometry analysis of 44 FISH-confirmed mantle cell lymphomas was reviewed in our lab. Among these, 37 showed the classical immunophenotype of mantle cell lymphoma. However, 7 cases (16%) were positive for both CD5 and CD23. The expression of CD23 varied from dim to bright. When compared to typical CLL, they showed FMC-7 expression and brighter than dim light chain expression. In one case, the light chain expression was dim. In conclusion, CD23 expression which was thought to be a specific marker for CLL/SLL may also be seen with mantle cell lymphoma. Although FMC-7 expression is seen in all CD23 positive mantle cell lymphomas, bright light chain expression is not universal. We recommend that FISH or immunohistochemical studies for cyclin D1 be performed on CD5/CD19 clonal B cell proliferations with CD23 expression if morphology or immunophenotype is atypical for CLL/SLL.


Author(s):  
Michał Szymczyk ◽  
Grzegorz Rymkiewicz ◽  
Zbigniew Bystydzieński ◽  
Małgorzata Szostakowska-Rodzoś ◽  
Renata Zub ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 302-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fiona Brown ◽  
Yang Zhang ◽  
Claire Hinterschied ◽  
Alexander Prouty ◽  
Shelby Sloan ◽  
...  

Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is an incurable B cell malignancy, defined by the t(11;14) translocation and comprises 3-6% of non-Hodgkin lymphomas diagnosed annually. MCL is associated with a poor prognosis due to emergence of resistance to immuno-chemotherapy and targeted agents. Due to the late median age of diagnosis, aggressive chemotherapy and stem cell transplantation are often not realistic options. The average overall survival of patients with MCL is 5 years and for the majority of patients who progress on targeted agents like ibrutinib, survival remains at a dismal 3-8 months. There is a major unmet need to identify new therapeutic approaches that are well tolerated by elderly patients to improve treatment outcomes and quality of life. Our group has identified the type II protein arginine methyltransferase enzyme, PRMT5, to be dysregulated in MCL and to promote growth and survival by supporting the cell cycle, PRC2 activity, and signaling via the BCR and PI3K/AKT pathways. We have developed first-in-class selective inhibitors of PRMT5 and, in collaboration with Prelude Therapeutics, we have demonstrated that novel SAM-competitive PRMT5 inhibitors provide potent anti-tumor activity in aggressive preclinical models of human MCL. Selective inhibition of PRMT5 in these models and MCL cell lines leads to disruption of constitutive PI3K/AKT signaling, dephosphorylation and nuclear translocation of FOXO1, and enhanced recruitment of this tumor suppressor protein to chromatin. We identified 136 newly emerged FOXO1-bound genomic loci following 48 hours of PRMT5 inhibition in the CCMCL1 MCL line by performing chromatin immunoprecipitation-seq analysis. These genes were markedly upregulated in CCMCL1 cells treated with the PRMT5 inhibitor PRT382 as determined by RNA-seq analysis. Among those genes, we identified and confirmed FOXO1 recruitment to the promoter of BAX, a pro-apoptotic member of the BCL2 family of proteins. Treatment of MCL cell lines (Granta-519, CCMCL1, Z-138, and SEFA) with the selective PRMT5 inhibitor PRT382 (10, 100nM) led to upregulation of BAX protein levels and induction of programmed cell death as measured by annexin V/PI staining and flow cytometry. We hypothesized that induction of BAX would trigger a therapeutic vulnerability to the BCL2 inhibitor venetoclax, and that combination PRMT5/BCL2 inhibitor therapy would drive synergistic cell death in MCL. Single agent and combination treatment with venetoclax and PRT382 was performed in eight MCL lines including a new cell line generated from our ibrutinib-refractory PDX model (SEFA) and IC50 and synergy scores were calculated. The Z-138 line was most sensitive to venetoclax (IC50<10nM) while CCMCL-1, SP53, JeKo-1, and Granta-519 demonstrated relative resistance (IC50>1uM). All lines reached an IC50 <1uM when co-treated with PRT382, with IC50 values ranging from 20 - 500nM. Combination treatments showed high levels of synergy (scores > 20) in 4 lines and moderate synergy (scores 10-20) in 2 lines. The two lines with the highest levels of synergy, Z-138 and SEFA, express high levels of BCL-2 and are Ibrutinib resistant. Overall there was a strong positive correlation between BCL2 expression and synergy score (r=0.707), and no correlation between PRMT5 expression and synergy score (r=0.084). In vivo evaluation in two preclinical MCL models (Granta-519 NSG mouse flank and an ibrutinib-resistant MCL PDX) showed therapeutic synergy with combination venetoclax/PRT382 treatment. In both models, mice were treated with sub-therapeutic doses of venetoclax and/or PRT543 (Granta) or PRT382 (IR-MCL PDX) and tumor burden assessed weekly via flank mass measurement (Granta) or flow cytometry (IR-MCL-PDX). Combination treatment with well-tolerated doses of venetoclax and PRMT5 inhibitors in both MCL in vivo models showed synergistic anti-tumor activity without evidence of toxicity. This preclinical data provides mechanistic rationale while demonstrating therapeutic synergy and lack of toxicity in this preclinical study and justifies further consideration of this combination strategy targeting PRMT5 and BCL2 in MCL in the clinical setting. PRT543, a selective PRMT5 inhibitor, has been advanced into clinical studies for the treatment of patients with solid tumors and hematologic malignancies, including MCL (NCT03886831). Disclosures Zhang: Prelude Therapeutics: Employment. Vaddi:Prelude Therapeutics: Employment. Scherle:Prelude Therapeutics: Employment. Baiocchi:Prelude: Consultancy.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 1284-1284
Author(s):  
Christiane Pott ◽  
Sebastian Boettcher ◽  
Stefan Gesk ◽  
Reiner Siebert ◽  
Wolfram Klapper ◽  
...  

Abstract Two prospectively randomized intergroup trials of the European MCL Network investigating the impact of different combined immuno-chemotherapy protocols for patients with stage II–IV mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) >< 65 yrs followed by autologous stem cell transplantation (PBSCT) for patients <65 yrs and a rituximab or interferone maintenance treatment for patients >65 yrs are currently performed. Patients and methods: 180 German patients with diagnostic peripheral blood (PB) involvement detectable by consensus IGH PCR were analysed for t(11;14) translocation by FISH and 4-colour Flow Cytometry (FC) at diagnosis as well as molecular response (MR) by quantitative IGH-RQ-PCR after induction. The results were compared to clinical parameters at diagnosis and PFS. Results: Patients had a median age of 61 years, an elevated LDH in 37%, B-symptoms in 41% and extranodal involvement in 37%. According to the MIPI risk factor score 26% had an adverse, 34% an intermediate and 40% a good prognosis. PB involvement by MCL was demonstrated in 67% (74/111) by t(11;14) FISH and in 97% (152/156) by FC. Detection of MCL cells by FC in PB did not correlate with clinical parameters as stage, LDH, extranodal involvement or bone marrow infiltration. However, median % of MCL cells measured by FC differed significantly with clinical stage (p<0.0001), LDH (p=0.0096) bone marrow infiltration (<0.0001) and MIPI prognostic index (0.0002). MR after induction treatment was achieved in 60% (60/100) of patients and correlated with BM infiltration at diagnosis (p=0.0117). There was a trend for improved PFS in patients achieving MR (PFS 90% vs. 75% at 15 months after induction) however, the observation time is still too short for definitive evaluation. Conclusion: FC is highly sensitive for detection of PB involvement in MCL and improves staging accuracy. Achievement of MR might be an early indicator for treatment outcome after immuno-chemotherapy in MCL with the potential of defining prognostic subgroups.


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