scholarly journals The Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cell CD123+ Compartment in Acute Leukemia with or without RUNX1 Mutation: High Inter-Patient Variability Disclosed by Immunophenotypic Unsupervised Analysis and Clustering

Hemato ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 572-585
Author(s):  
Anna Porwit ◽  
Marie C. Béné

Plasmacytoid dendritic cells (PDC) constitute a small subset of normal bone marrow (BM) cells but have also been shown to be present, sometimes in large numbers, in several hematological malignancies such as acute myeloid leukemia with RUNX1 mutation, chronic myelomonocytic leukemia or, obviously, blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasms. These cells have been reported to display somewhat variable immunophenotypic features in different conditions. However, little is known of their plasticity within individual patients. Using an unsupervised clustering tool (FlowSOM) to re-visit flow cytometry results of seven previously analyzed cases of hematological malignancies (6 acute myeloid leukemia and one chronic myelomonocytic leukemia) with a PDC contingent, we report here on the unexpectedly high variability of PDC subsets. Although five of the studied patients harbored a RUNX1 mutation, no consistent feature of PDCs could be disclosed as associated with this variant. Moreover, the one normal single-node small subset of PDC detected in the merged file of six normal BM could be retrieved in the remission BM samples of three successfully treated patients. This study highlights the capacity of unsupervised flow cytometry analysis to delineate cell subsets not detectable with classical supervised tools.

Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 5216-5216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caroline Hamm ◽  
Sindu M. Kanjeekal ◽  
Rasna Gupta ◽  
Wendy Ng

Abstract Case 1 70 year old man presented with acute myelo-monocytic leukemia diagnosed in June 2009. He demonstrated no response to standard 7+3, nor high dose AraC. He remains in remission from his acute leukemia 4 years from his diagnosis, as long has he remains on the dandelion root tea, which was started immediately after chemotherapy. If he takes less than three cups / day of the DRT, his peripheral blood monocytes start to rise.1 Repeat testing demonstrates chronic myelomonocytic leukemia. Case 2 Sixty year old female with acute myelomonoctyic leukemia possibly progressing from chronic myelomonocytic leukemia. She underwent induction chemotherapy with 7+3. Her day 28 marrow showed no evidence of remission. She then underwent re-induction with high dose Ara-C at 3 gm/ m2 x 6 doses. She did receive neupogen support, and on day 28, her peripheral blood white blood count was 60 x 109/L with monocytes of 3.0 x 109/L and blasts 1.2 x 109/L. Repeat bone marrow biopsy identified chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML). She stopped the neupogen and started dandelion root tea, three cups per day. She is now 5 months from her initial diagnosis and remains in complete hematological response: WBC 4.2/ Hgb 127 / Platelet 182/ Neutophils 2.6 / Monocytes 0.8. Other Cases We have had other possible cases that may support the efficacy of this product in refractory hematological malignancies. In one case of CMML-2 a 76 year old man did receive azacytadine for the duration of his treatment, as well as DRT. He finally succumbed to his disease at 30 months after his diagnosis. We previously presented an elderly female that used only DRT to treat her CMML and experienced a hematological remission for 3 months prior to relapse. Her initial WBC was 130,000 x 109/L.3 Another case of acute myeloid leukemia, who, because of co-morbidities was not a candidate for more aggressive options, relapsed from her M2- acute myeloid leukemia in November 2010. She was treated with low dose AraC, and then dandelion root tea. Although she remained transfusion dependent, she only developed peripheral blasts when she was unable to find the DRT for one month. She continues on the DRT at 15 month from relapse of her acute leukemia.3 We have a phase 1 clinical trial open at our centre investigating a novel formulation of dandelion root extract in refractory hematological malignancies. We plan to study the molecular pathways previously described in CMML including TET2 , CBL , NRAS, KRAS, JAK2 and RUNX1. http://www.ontario.canadiancancertrials.ca/trial/Default.aspx?dsEndecaNav=Ro%3A0%2CNs%3AP_TrialStatus_sort_en%7C101%7C-1%7C%2CNrc%3Aid-30-dynrank-disabled%7Cid-130-dynrank-disabled%7Cid-131-dynrank-disabled%7Cid-132-dynrank-disabled%7Cid-619-dynrank-disabled%7Cid-620-dynrank-disabled%7Cid-621-dynrank-disabled%7Cid-622-dynrank-disabled%7Cid-4294965875-dynrank-disabled%2CN%3A4294952782&TrialId=OCT1226&lang=en 1 Caroline Hamm and Sindu M. Kanjeekal, Unusual Response of Acute Monocytic Leukemia to Dandelion Root Extract, Blood (ASH Annual Meeting Abstracts), Nov 2011; 118: 4288 2. Kohlmann A, Grossmann V, et al. Next Generation Sequencing of Technology Reveals a Characteristic Pattern of Molecular Mutations in 72.8% of Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukemia by Detecting Frequent alterations in TET2, CBL, RAS, and RUNX1. JCO (28) 2009. 3. Ng W, Hamm C. Can Dandelions Cure? Schulich School of Medicine Research Day, 2009 Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 2699-2699
Author(s):  
Robert D. Petty ◽  
Farideh Miraki-Moud ◽  
Tracy Chaplin ◽  
Grossmann Vera ◽  
Daverio Andrea ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2699 Transformation from chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) to acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is associated with a poor prognosis. Clinical features have been used to score those at high risk, e.g. increased marrow blast percentage. Recently, several gene mutations have been identified including TET2, KRAS, NRAS, CBL and RUNX1, of which TET2 is the most frequent (Kohlmann et al 2010, Kosmider et al 2009). Initial descriptions of TET2 mutations in myeloid malignancy suggested that they were early mutations (Delhommeau et al 2009), however subsequent studies have shown in some patients with myeloproliferative neoplasia (MPN) they can be preceded by mutations in JAK2 (Schaub et al 2010). We report a male patient who was diagnosed with CMML aged 43 years. His marrow blast count was 6% and within 2 months he had transformed to AML (FAB M4) with marrow blasts of 50%. He was treated with daunorubicin and AraC (Barts 12 schedule) and obtained a complete morphological remission (CR). However he relapsed 88 days after CR in his skin, central nervous system and marrow. He died with conservative treatment after 6 months. Using this case as a model for transforming CMML, we aimed to identify clonal changes characteristic of the three stages of his disease, chronic leukaemia, transformation to acute leukemia and subsequent relapse. We used cytogenetic analysis, single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) arrays (Affymetrix SNP 6.0 and 10K; 10K data previously reported by Raghavan et al 2008) to identify the clonal changes. Gene mutation analysis of genomic and cDNA was performed using PCR, cloning and Sanger and amplicon deep-sequencing for the mutational burden of TET2, CBL and KRAS (454 Life Sciences, Branford, CT). At all stages of his disease, he had a normal karyotype, a NPM1 mutation, but no mutations of FLT3, JAK2, KRAS or CBL (Table). Uniparental disomy (UPD) was demonstrated on chromosome 4q at relapse but not present at diagnosis, suggesting an associated TET2 mutation that would be heterozygous at diagnosis and homozygous at relapse. The heterozygous mutation was indentified in the CMML and at transformation, in a region adjacent to the splice site of the end of exon 7. The transcript resulted in a mis-splicing event leading to a stop codon. A second truncated mutant due to a deletion in exon 6 was found expressed at low level. Deep-sequencing of genomic DNA confirmed a deletion in exon 6 consistent with this product at 2.4% (918-fold coverage) in the CMML, and increased to 5.7% (865-fold coverage) burden at transformation. At relapse, the genomic mutation was homozygous. Expression of only the mis-spliced product was observed, with no wild type TET2, and no evidence of the second truncated product by cloning or deep-sequencing (832 reads). Homozygous TET2 mutations are associated with 4qUPD in MPN and myelodysplastic syndromes (Mohamedali et al 2009, Janowska et al 2010), but this is the first description of clonal evolution of a hetero- to homozygous TET2 mutation at disease progression. The case is consistent with the hypothesis that TET2 mutations evolve early in the pathogenesis of myeloid malignancies. However, it also shows there is considerable instability of TET2 mutations, with multiple mutations at various levels, and with mitotic recombination being a late event leading to relapse. CMML Transformed AML Relapsed AML CGN 46,XY 46,XY 46,XY SNP array Not done No somatic copy number abnormalities detected 4qUPD 88201900-qter TET2 c4340+5G>T+10_+21del het result: Cys1298X c4340+5G>T+10_+21del het result: Cys1298X c4340+5G>T+10_+21del hom result: Cys1298X c3732_3733delCT 2.4% result: Tyr1245LeufsX22 c3732_3733delCT 5.7% result: Tyr1245LeufsX22 Absent NPM1 Dup956_959TCTG het Dup956_959TCTG het Dup956_959TCTG het Disclosure: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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