Faculty Opinions recommendation of Risk of relapse of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia is predicted by flow cytometric measurement of residual disease on day 15 bone marrow.

Author(s):  
Vaskar Saha ◽  
Krishnan Shekhar
Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 1384-1384
Author(s):  
Karthik B.K Bommannan ◽  
Man Updesh Singh Sachdeva ◽  
Parveen Bose ◽  
Deepak Bansal ◽  
Ram Kumar Marwaha ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Minimal residual disease (MRD) has emerged as an independent prognostic factor for patients of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). There is a strong correlation between MRD levels in bone marrow and the risk of relapse in childhood & adult leukemias 1, 2. Bone marrow MRD (BM-MRD) level of ≥ 0.01% is considered as positive and a mid-induction MRD of ≥ 1% is associated with high risk of relapse 3. Recently, the concept of peripheral blood MRD (PB-MRD), as a replacement for BM-MRD, has hit the lime light. In pediatric B-ALL, presence of PB-MRD is associated with a high relapse rate in comparison to cases which are PB-MRD negative 4, 5. This study was aimed to compare the levels of mid-induction (day 15) MRD levels in bone marrow and peripheral blood of pediatric B-ALL patients with a hypothesis that PB-MRD levels correlate with BM-MRD levels, and thus can predict BM-MRD levels for further management of the patient. Methods Forty newly diagnosed CD19+CD10+CD34+/- pediatric B-ALL patients under Vincristine, L-Asparaginase and Dexamethasone, were assessed for MRD levels on their paired day 15 PB & BM samples using six colour flow cytometry. With informed consent, both the samples were collected in EDTA vacutainers and lyse-stain-wash technique was used to prepare a single six colour tube comprising of SYTO 13/ CD34PE/ CD20PerCP/ CD19 PECy7/ CD10APC/ CD45APCH7 for each sample. The processed samples were run on BD FACS Canto II with acquisition of 1 million events or till the tubes were empty. Analysis was done using BD FACS Diva software and MRD of ≥ 0.01% was considered positive. Results Among 40 pairs of day 15 PB and BM samples, 25 (62.5%) were BM-MRD positive. Sixteen pairs (40%) had PB-MRD and BM-MRD co-positivity, 9 pairs (22.5%) had isolated BM-MRD positivity and 15 pairs (37.5%) were MRD negative in both PB and BM samples. In other words, among the 25 BM-MRD positive cases, simultaneous PB-MRD was positive in 16 patients (64%) and none of the samples had isolated PB-MRD positivity. Overall analysis of MRD positive cases showed a direct correlation between PB-MRD and BM-MRD (ρ = +0.684, p < 0.000) and BM-MRD levels were 7 times higher than the PB-MRD. In addition, ROC analysis with PB-MRD of ≥ 0.01% as a cut-off, revealed that, the most likelihood of PB-MRD being positive was when BM-MRD was ≥ 0.31%. Conclusions In contrast to the sparsely available literature, our study shows a significant correlation between PB & BM-MRD levels in day 15 paired samples of B-ALL cases. The MRD levels were 7 times higher in BM as compared to PB and PB-MRD was mostly positive with BM-MRD of ≥0.31%. In other words, day 15 PB-MRD positivity indirectly indicates that there is a minimum BM-MRD of 0.31%. Since literature reports prognostic significance of mid-induction BM-MRD at levels ≥1%, on day 15, an assessment of peripheral blood MRD alone, might yield clinically relevant prognostic information. A paired analysis at different time points might also establish a similar correlation as seen in the present study, eliminating the need of BM-MRD during further follow ups of the patient. This will help in avoiding an invasive procedure and improve patient compliance. References 1. Irving J, Jesson J, Virgo P, Case M, Minto L, Eyre L, et al. Establishment and validation of a standard protocol for the detection of minimal residual disease in B lineage childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia by flow cytometry in a multi-center setting. haematologica. 2009;94(6):870-4. 2. Coustan-Smith E, Sancho J, Behm FG, Hancock ML, Razzouk BI, Ribeiro RC, et al. Prognostic importance of measuring early clearance of leukemic cells by flow cytometry in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Blood. 2002;100(1):52-8. 3. Basso G, Veltroni M, Valsecchi MG, Dworzak MN, Ratei R, Silvestri D, et al. Risk of relapse of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia is predicted by flow cytometric measurement of residual disease on day 15 bone marrow. Journal of Clinical Oncology. 2009;27(31):5168-74. 4. Elain CS, Sancho J, Michael LH, Bassem. Use of peripheral blood instead of bone marrow to monitor residual disease in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Blood. 2002;100 (7):2399-402. 5. Brisco MJ, Sykes PJ, Hughes E, Dolman G, Neoh SH, Peng LM, et al. Monitoring minimal residual disease in peripheral blood in B lineage acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. British journal of haematology. 1997;99(2):314-9. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2009 ◽  
Vol 27 (31) ◽  
pp. 5168-5174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giuseppe Basso ◽  
Marinella Veltroni ◽  
Maria Grazia Valsecchi ◽  
Michael N. Dworzak ◽  
Richard Ratei ◽  
...  

Purpose Speed of blast clearance is an indicator of outcome in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Availability of measurement of minimal residual disease (MRD) at an early time point with a reduced-cost method is of clinical relevance. In the AIEOP-BFM-ALL (Associazione Italiana Ematologia Oncologia Pediatrica and Berlin-Frankfurt-Münster Study Group) 2000 trial, patients were stratified by levels of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) MRD at day +33 and +78. AIEOP studied the prognostic impact of MRD measured by flow cytometry (FCM) at day 15 of induction therapy. Patients and Methods Bone marrow samples from 830 Italian patients were collected on day 15, after 14 days of steroids, and one dose of intrathecal methotrexate, vincristine, daunorubicine, and asparaginase. Cells were analyzed by four-color FCM for detection of leukemia-associated immunophenotypes. Results Three patient risk groups were identified by FCM: standard (< 0.1% blast cells; 42% of the total), intermediate (0.1 to < 10%; 47%), and high (≥ 10%; 11%). Their 5-year cumulative incidences of relapse were 7.5% (SE, 1.5), 17.5% (SE, 2.1), and 47.2% (SE, 5.9), respectively. In multivariate analysis, FCM was the most important prognostic factor among those available by day 15, with two-fold and five-fold increase in the risk of relapse compared with patients with less than 0.1%. PCR MRD, when added to the model, had significant prognostic impact; yet high levels of FCM MRD retained an independent ability to detect a significantly higher risk of relapse. Conclusion Measurement of FCM MRD in day 15 bone marrow was the most powerful early predictor of relapse, applicable to virtually all patients; it may complement PCR MRD–based stratification including later time points, thus allowing additional treatment tailoring.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 1423-1423
Author(s):  
Giuseppe Basso ◽  
Giuseppe Gaipa ◽  
Maria Grazia Valsecchi ◽  
Marinella Veltroni ◽  
Michael Dworzak ◽  
...  

Abstract Early measurement of blast clearance is a relevant prognostic indicator in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). To this purpose we measured, by four-colour flowcytometry (FC), the percentage of blast cells in bone marrow samples from Italian patients enrolled in the multicentre AIEOP-BFM ALL 2000 trial. Samples were collected on day 15 (after 14 days of steroids, and one dose of IT-MTX, vincristine, daunorubicine, asparaginase) and shipped overnight to the reference laboratory. The data were compared to PCR-MRD performed, by study design, on day +33 and +78 BM samples. We report the results of patients enrolled between December 2000 and October 2004. The 561 patients studied were not different from the remaining ones (with no available material) including their cumulative incidence of relapse (SE): 17.3% (1.9) vs. 18.1% (1.5) in 850 patients not studied. According to the results of FC-MRD, 5 groups were defined: negative (blast count &lt;0.01%, n=143), &lt;0.1% (n=94), &lt;1% (n=149), 1–10% (n=119), &gt;10% (n=56). Their cumulative 5-year risk of relapse was: 4.1% (1.9), 9.3% (4.0), 14.3% (3.2), 26.5% (5.5), 53.7% (7.4), respectively. By PCR-MRD, the same patients were stratified as follows: 177 were standard risk and had 5-year risk of relapse of 4.1% (1.7), 233 at intermediate risk had a relapse risk of 24.2% (3.4), 37 at high risk had a relapse risk of 58.1% (9); the remaining 124 patients (21.6%) were not stratified by PCR-MRD due to lack of 2 sensitive (≥10−4) markers. Of 177 patients classified as standard risk by PCR (double negative), 110 fell within the 2 subgroups with lower FC-MRD (&lt;0.1%), 46 had &lt;1%, 19 had &lt;10%, only 2 &gt;10% of blasts. Of the 233 patients stratified as PCR-MRD intermediate risk (d78 &lt;10−3), FC-MRD related groups had the following probabilities of EFS: 93.5% (3.6; n=47), 83.3%(8.0; n=30), 80.5%(5.1; n=70), 66.5%(10.8; n=57), 39.2%(11.8; n=29). We conclude that very early measurement of FC-MRD on day 15 bone marrow is feasible in our multicentre cooperative setting. On the basis of our data we suggest the following risk groups: standard, when &lt;0.1% blasts on day 15 BM; intermediate for 0.1 to &lt;10%; high, for &gt;10% blasts. These groups had a risk of relapse of 6.2% (1.9), 19.5% (3), and 53.7% (7.4), respectively. Since it is fast, reproducible, relatively cheap and applicable to virtually all patients, our group decided to apply it prospectively on all ALL patients to integrate PCR-based stratification. Our findings showed that: early (d15) MRD detection by FCM identifies different patients than PCR on d33 and d78; FCM may be very useful to identify earlier the highly sensitive ALL with low relapse risk (even though long-term follow-up is still missing), whereas later timepoints may be accessible for PCR and the identification of HR patients.


Leukemia ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 635-641 ◽  
Author(s):  
B Denys ◽  
A J van der Sluijs-Gelling ◽  
C Homburg ◽  
C E van der Schoot ◽  
V de Haas ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (20) ◽  
pp. 4197-4204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun J. Yang ◽  
Cheng Cheng ◽  
Meenakshi Devidas ◽  
Xueyuan Cao ◽  
Dario Campana ◽  
...  

Abstract With the use of risk-directed therapy for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), outcome has improved dramatically in the past 40 years. However, a substantial portion of patients, many of whom have no known risk factors, experience relapse. Taking a genome-wide approach, in the present study, we evaluated the relationships between genotypes at 444 044 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with the risk of relapse in 2535 children with newly diagnosed ALL after adjusting for genetic ancestry and treatment regimen. We identified 134 SNPs that were reproducibly associated with ALL relapse. Of 134 relapse SNPs, 133 remained prognostic after adjusting for all known relapse risk factors, including minimal residual disease, and 111 were significant even among patients who were negative for minimal residual disease after remission induction therapy. The C allele at rs7142143 in the PYGL gene was associated with 3.6-fold higher risk of relapse than the T allele (P = 6.7 × 10−9). Fourteen of the 134 relapse SNPs, including variants in PDE4B and ABCB1, were also associated with antileukemic drug pharmacokinetics and/or pharmacodynamics. In the present study, we systematically identified host genetic variations related to treatment outcome of childhood ALL, most of which were prognostic independent of known risk factors for relapse, and some of which also influenced outcome by affecting host dis-position of antileukemic drugs. All trials are registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov or www.cancer.gov (COG P9904: NCT00005585; COG P9905: NCT00005596; COG P9906: NCT00005603; St Jude Total XIIIB: NCI-T93-0101D; and St Jude Total XV: NCT00137111).


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