Faculty Opinions recommendation of Prognostic Value of Ki-67 Index, Cytology, and Growth Pattern in Mantle-Cell Lymphoma: Results From Randomized Trials of the European Mantle Cell Lymphoma Network.

Author(s):  
Leo Gordon
Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 2977-2977 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva Hoster ◽  
Andreas Rosenwald ◽  
Francoise Berger ◽  
Heinz-Wolfram Bernd ◽  
Sylvia Hartmann ◽  
...  

Abstract On Behalf of the European MCL Pathology Panel Introduction: Mantle-cell lymphoma (MCL) is an aggressive B-cell lymphoma with a median overall survival (OS) of 5 years, but clinical course varies considerably. This variability has been partly explained by clinical characteristics forming the MIPI (Hoster et al., JCO 2014), but also biological and histological features such as tumor cell proliferation (Ki-67 index), cytology, or growth pattern (Tiemann et al., BJH 2005). Immuno-chemotherapy induction represents the current standard of care, in younger patients including high-dose cytarabine and followed by autologous stem cell transplantation, whereas older patients benefit from rituximab maintenance (Dreyling et al., Ann Oncol 2013). In 2004, the European MCL Network started two large randomized trials, MCL Younger and MCL Elderly, for previously untreated MCL patients. Histopathological features of diagnostic samples were centrally assessed by the European MCL Pathology Panel. Since MCL is relatively rare, evaluations of prognostic factors were mostly based on smaller, retrospectively collected patient cohorts. We now aimed to comparatively evaluate the prognostic value of Ki-67 index, cytology, and growth pattern using the data of these trials. Methods: The Ki-67 index was counted according to published guidelines (Klapper et al., J Hematopathol 2009). MCL cytology was classified as classic, small-cell (B-CLL-like), pleomorphic (DLBCL-like), or blastic (LB-like) (Vogt and Klapper, Histopathology 2013). MCLs with pleomorphic or blastic cytology were combined to blastoid MCL. The growth pattern was classified as diffuse (≤50% nodular) or non-diffuse (>50% nodular or predominantly mantle-zone pattern). The prognostic relevance of these markers was evaluated with respect to OS, adjusting for MIPI score. Results: Of 1012 trial patients with MCL, Ki-67 index, cytology, or growth pattern were available in 50%, 61%, and 47%, respectively. Reasons for missing information were mainly insufficient material or staining. Median Ki-67 index was 20% (2%-97%). 88% had classic MCL, 2% small-cell, 7% pleomorphic and 3% blastic cytology, summing up to 10% with blastoid MCL. 63% of patients had a diffuse growth pattern. Higher Ki-67 index, blastoid MCL, and diffuse growth were each associated with higher MIPI score. Growth pattern was not clearly associated with Ki-67 index or cytology, whereas pleomorphic (median Ki-67 index 39%, range 7%-90%) or blastic MCL (median 80%, 29%-97%) displayed a substantially higher Ki-67 index compared non-blastoid MCL (median 19%, 2%-95%). In univariable analyses, the adjusted OS hazard ratios for higher Ki-67 index (10% increase), blastoid MCL, or diffuse growth were 1.16 (95% CI 1.09-1.24, p<0.0001), 1.91 (1.34-2.72, p=0.0004), and 1.16 (0.84-1.60, p=0.38), respectively. In multivariable analyses, Ki-67 index was more relevant (adjusted hazard ratio 1.12, 1.04-1.22, p=0.0032) than blastoid MCL (1.46, 0.94-2.29, p=0.095), whereas growth pattern was not prognostic. Accordingly, patients with Ki-67 index ≥30% had substantially inferior OS than patients with Ki-67 index <30% in both, blastoid and non-blastoid MCL (Figure 1). Conclusions: In a large cohort of MCL patients treated in randomized trials according to current guidelines, tumor cell proliferation (Ki-67 index) was a powerful prognostic marker, superior to cytology and growth pattern, and independent of clinical prognostic factors. The Ki-67 index further stratified patients with non-blastoid as well as patients with blastoid MCL into groups with substantially different survival. Thus, standardized assessment of the Ki-67 index (Klapper et al. J Hematopathol 2009) should be routinely performed in clinical practice to allow a more comprehensive individual risk estimation of MCL patients. Further analyses will aim at the biological basis of this prognostic effect. Figure 1: Overall survival according to Ki-67 index (< vs. ≥ 30% from Determann et al., Blood 2008) in patients with non-blastoid (left) or blastoid (right) mantle-cell lymphoma (MCL) Figure 1:. Overall survival according to Ki-67 index (< vs. ≥ 30% from Determann et al., Blood 2008) in patients with non-blastoid (left) or blastoid (right) mantle-cell lymphoma (MCL) Figure 2 Figure 2. Disclosures Dreyling: Roche: Honoraria, Research Funding. Klapper:Roche: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (5) ◽  
pp. 604-611 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marie-Hélène Delfau-Larue ◽  
Wolfram Klapper ◽  
Françoise Berger ◽  
Fabrice Jardin ◽  
Josette Briere ◽  
...  

Key Points CDKN2A and TP53 deletions remain of bad prognostic value in younger MCL patients treated according to the current standard of care. CDKN2A and TP53 deletions have independent deleterious effects and should be considered for treatment decisions in addition to MIPI and Ki-67 index.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 1625-1625 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marie-Hélène Delfau-Larue ◽  
Klapper Wolfram ◽  
Francoise Berger ◽  
Fabrice Jardin ◽  
Josette Briere ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction Mantle-cell lymphoma (MCL) is of poor prognosis, with a median survival of about 5 years. Besides the t(11;14) translocation, several secondary genetic abnormalities have been shown to correlate with prognosis. However, most studies have analysed patients with heterogeneous treatment, mostly with anthracyclin-based regimens. In 2004, the European MCL Network started the randomized MCL Younger trial comparing R-CHOP followed by high-dose radiochemotherapy and autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) versus alternating R-CHOP/R-DHAP followed by a high-dose cytarabine conditioning regimen and ASCT in previously untreated MCL stage II-IV patients up to the age of 65y. The R-CHOP/R-DHAP arm showed improved time to treatment failure (TTF) and, potentially, overall survival (OS) (Hermine et al., ASH 2010, ASH 2012). Our aim was to revisit the prognostic value of some gene copy number alterations (GCNA) in this randomized trial and to determine whether high-dose cytarabine could counteract some of those factors. Methods The inclusion criteria for this biological study were: confirmed histological diagnosis of MCL, the availability of diagnostic tumor DNA and complete clinical data. When no frozen biopsy was available, peripheral samples with more than 50% tumor cells were considered eligible for GCNA analysis. CDKN1B, CDK2, and MDM2 were analyzed using quantitative multiplex PCR of short fluorescent fragments (QMPSF) (Jardin et al., BJH 2009), 6q25-q26, CDK4, and the 13q14 locus were analyzed by multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) (MRC-Holland CLL kit), and MYC, CDKN2A, ATM, RB1 and TP53 were assessed by both methods. The analyses of the prognostic value of GCNA was adjusted for clinical prognostic factors summarized in the quantitative MIPI score (age, performance status, LDH, and WBC). The rate of proliferating tumor cells (Ki-67 index) was centrally assessed by the reference pathologists of the European MCL Pathology Panel according to published guidelines (Klapper et al., J Hematopathol 2009). Outcome variables were TTF from treatment start to stable disease, progression, or death from any cause, and OS from trial registration to death from any cause. Results Of 135 patients fulfilling the inclusion criteria (median age 56 years), 49%, 26%, and 25% of patients were of low, intermediate, and high MIPI risk . The most frequent amplification involved MYC (18%), whereas the most frequent deletion involved the 13q14 locus (36%), including RB1 in 26%. As expected, CDKN2A and TP53 deletions were frequently found (25% and 22%, respectively). ATM alterations mostly consist of deletion (25%), but amplification was found in 3 of 129patients. The frequencies of GCNA did not differ according to the type of sample analyzed i.e. tumor biopsies (n=79) vs. high tumor load peripheral blood or bone marrow samples (n=56). The Ki-67 index was higher in patients with CDKN2A or RB1 deletion compared to patients without, but was not different between patients with or without TP53 deletion. Only TP53 gene status was associated with MCL cytology, with more frequent deletion in blastoid forms (4/8) than in classic MCL (11/81, 14%). In univariable analyses, deletions of CDKN2A, 13q14, RB1, CDKN1B, and TP53 were associated with shorter TTF and OS, whereas GCNA of 6q25-q26, MYC, ATM, CDK2, CDK4, and MDM2 were not prognostic. In multivariable analyses, adjusting for MIPI score, CDKN2A and TP53 deletions showed independent prognostic impact with hazard ratios of 2.4 (p=0.001) and 2.3 (p=0.004) for TTF and 2.3 (p=0.007) and 2.4 (p=0.007) for OS. This effect was observed in both treatment arms (Figure 1). In addition, there was an interacting effect of CDKN2A (p16) deletion and TP53 deletion on TTF (p=0.004). Conclusions The introduction of high-dose cytarabine in first-line treatment of younger MCL patients did not erase the adverse prognostic value of TP53 and CDKN2A deletions observed with previous regimens. Moreover, our study identified a small patient group of very bad prognosis which could benefit of more aggressive regimens or new targeted drugs combination. Figure 1: TTF (left) and OS (right) according to CDKN2A/TP53 deletion status in patients of the R-CHOP/R-DHAP study arm; nom=not deleted, del=deleted Figure 1:. TTF (left) and OS (right) according to CDKN2A/TP53 deletion status in patients of the R-CHOP/R-DHAP study arm; nom=not deleted, del=deleted Figure 2 Figure 2. Disclosures Feugier: Roche: Honoraria. Haioun:Roche, Celgene, Takeda, Pfizer, Janssen,: Honoraria.


2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (12) ◽  
pp. 1386-1394 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva Hoster ◽  
Andreas Rosenwald ◽  
Françoise Berger ◽  
Heinz-Wolfram Bernd ◽  
Sylvia Hartmann ◽  
...  

Purpose Mantle-cell lymphoma (MCL) is a rather aggressive B-cell malignancy whose considerable variability of individual outcome is associated with clinical characteristics (Mantle Cell Lymphoma International Prognostic Index [MIPI]). The Ki-67 index is a strong independent prognostic factor; however, the biologic MIPI (MIPI-b) distinguishes only two groups, which does not appropriately depict the clinical heterogeneity. By using the cohort from the European MCL Younger and MCL Elderly trials, we aimed to evaluate the additional prognostic impact of cytology and growth pattern and to improve risk stratification with the Ki-67 index and MIPI. Patients and Methods Diagnostic tumor biopsies were reviewed by the European Mantle Cell Lymphoma Pathology Panel to determine Ki-67 index by using published guidelines, cytology, and growth pattern. We evaluated prognostic effects for overall survival (OS) by Cox regression. For the cohort used for MIPI-b development (German Low-Grade Lymphoma Study Group [GLSG] 1996 and GLSG2000), we checked whether the equally weighted combination of Ki-67 index (dichotomized at the validated 30% cutoff) and MIPI risk groups was adequate and compared the prognostic power of this modified combination to MIPI and MIPI-b for the MCL Younger/MCL Elderly cohort. Results The Ki-67 index was assessed in 508 of 832 patients (median age, 62 years). Blastoid cytology was associated with inferior OS independently of MIPI but not independently of the Ki-67 index. Growth pattern was not independently prognostic. The modified combination of the Ki-67 index and MIPI separated four groups with 5-year OS: 85%, 72%, 43%, and 17% (P < .001) and was more discriminative than MIPI and MIPI-b. Conclusion Using the Ki-67 index is superior to using cytology and growth pattern as prognostic factors in MCL. The modified combination of the Ki-67 index and MIPI showed a refined risk stratification, reflecting their strong complementary prognostic effects while integrating the most relevant prognostic factors available in clinical routine.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Uzma Mohammad Siddiqui ◽  
Sarika N. Rao ◽  
Pallavi Kanwar Galera ◽  
Nahida Islam ◽  
Mira S. Torres

Background. While 2% of all extranodal Non-Hodgkin Lymphomas present in the thyroid, there exists insufficient data to describe the incidence of mantle cell lymphoma in the thyroid. A case series of 1400 patients revealed that <1% of thyroid lymphomas may be MCL; hence better understanding of the disease course is essential.Patient Findings. A 65-year-old female was referred for a multinodular goiter. Multiple fine needle aspirations from the dominant right nodule were consistent with Hashimoto’s thyroiditis and flow cytometry was negative. Due to progressing dysphagia, she underwent total thyroidectomy.Summary. Pathology revealed MCL with mantle zone growth pattern in the right thyroid. Flow cytometry showed monoclonal B cells comprising 9% of total cells. The Ki-67 index was 10%. She was diagnosed as having stage IIE MCL and offered conservative management by medical oncology, given that she had no B symptoms.Conclusion. Though chemotherapy is the treatment of choice in MCL, a subset of patients with low-grade disease may be observed. As in our patient, mantle zone growth pattern and a Ki-67 index < 10% suggest a favorable prognosis. A diagnosis of primary MCL in the thyroid remains rare and staging modalities as well as treatment options continue to evolve.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 111 (4) ◽  
pp. 2385-2387 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olaf Determann ◽  
Eva Hoster ◽  
German Ott ◽  
Heinz Wolfram Bernd ◽  
Christoph Loddenkemper ◽  
...  

Clinical outcome of mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is highly heterogeneous. Tumor cell proliferation as assessed by the Ki-67 index has been shown to yield prognostic information on MCL in many studies using heterogeneously treated patient cohorts. The prognostic value of the Ki-67 index in patients treated with anti-CD20 therapy has not been studied so far. We analyzed the Ki-67 index at primary diagnosis in 249 advanced-stage MCL patients treated within randomized trials. Ki-67 showed high prognostic relevance for overall survival (relative risk 1.27 for 10% higher Ki-67, P < .001), also independently from clinical prognostic factors. The 3 groups with different Ki-67 index of less than 10%, 10% to less than 30%, and 30% or more showed significantly different overall survival in patients treated with CHOP (P = .001) as well as in patients treated with CHOP in combination with anti-CD20 therapy (R-CHOP, P = .013). Thus, the Ki-67 index remains an important prognostic marker in the era of anti-CD20 therapy. The Euro-pean MCL study is registered at www.ClinicalTrials.gov as #NCT00016887.


Blood ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 95 (2) ◽  
pp. 619-626 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto Chiarle ◽  
Leo M. Budel ◽  
Jeffrey Skolnik ◽  
Glauco Frizzera ◽  
Marco Chilosi ◽  
...  

Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is an aggressive neoplasm characterized by the deregulated expression of cyclin D1 by t(11;14). The molecular mechanisms responsible for MCL's clinical behavior remain unclear. The authors have investigated the expression of p53, E2F-1, and the CDK inhibitors p27 and p21 in 110 MCLs, relating their expression to proliferative activity (Ki-67). For comparison, they have similarly analyzed low-grade (12 MALT, 16 CLL/SLL) and high-grade (19 DLCL) lymphomas. p53 was detected more frequently in large-cell MCL (l-MCL; 5 of 7) than in classical MCL (s-MCL; 13 of 103) and DLCL (8 of 19). In MCL and DLCL, the percentage of E2F-1+ nuclei was high, correlating with high Ki-67 expression. Most MCLs (91 of 112) and DLCLs (12 of 19) showed a loss of p27; MALT and CLL/SLL, however, were p27 positive. Reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction and in vitro protein degradation assays demonstrated that MCLs have normal p27 mRNA expression but increased p27 protein degradation activity via the proteasome pathway. Correlation of MCL p53 and p27 expression with clinical data showed an association between reduced overall survival rates and the overexpression of p53 (P = .001), the loss of p27 (P = .002), or both. Loss of p27 identified patients with a worse clinical outcome among p53 negative cases (P = .002). These findings demonstrated that MCL has a distinct cell cycle protein expression similar to that of high-grade lymphoma. The loss of p27 and the overexpression of p53 in MCL are prognostic markers that identify patients at high risk. The demonstration that low levels of p27 in MCL result from enhanced proteasome-mediated degradation should encourage additional clinical trials. (Blood. 2000;95:619-626)


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (15) ◽  
pp. 3486-3494
Author(s):  
Diego Villa ◽  
Laurie H. Sehn ◽  
Kerry J. Savage ◽  
Cynthia L. Toze ◽  
Kevin Song ◽  
...  

Abstract Rituximab-containing chemotherapy regimens constitute standard first-line therapy for mantle cell lymphoma (MCL). Since June 2013, 190 patients ≥18 years of age with MCL in British Columbia have been treated with bendamustine and rituximab (BR). The overall response rate to BR was 88% (54% complete response). Of these, 61 of 89 patients (69%) aged ≤65 years received autologous stem cell transplantation and 141 of 190 patients (74%) from the entire cohort received maintenance rituximab. Twenty-three patients (12%) had progressive disease, associated with high risk per the Mantle Cell Lymphoma International Prognostic Index (MIPI), Ki-67 ≥50%, and blastoid/pleomorphic histology. Outcomes were compared with a historical cohort of 248 patients treated with rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (R-CHOP; January 2003 to May 2013). Treatment with BR was associated with significant improvements in progression-free survival (PFS), but not overall survival (OS), compared with R-CHOP in the whole cohort (3-year PFS, 66% BR vs 51% R-CHOP, P = .003; 3-year OS, 73% BR vs 66% R-CHOP, P = .054) and in those &gt;65 years of age (3-year PFS, 56% BR vs 35% R-CHOP, P = .001; 3-year OS, 64% BR vs 55% R-CHOP, P = .063). Outcomes in transplanted patients were not statistically significantly different compared with R-CHOP (3-year PFS, 85% BR vs 76% R-CHOP, P = .135; 3-year OS, 90% BR vs 88% R-CHOP, P = .305), although in multivariate analyses, treatment with BR was associated with improved PFS (hazard ratio, 0.40 [95% confidence interval, 0.17-0.94]; P = .036) but not OS. BR is an effective first-line option for most patients with MCL, however, outcomes are suboptimal for those with high-risk features and further studies integrating novel agents are warranted.


2011 ◽  
Vol 102 (9) ◽  
pp. Sep cover-Sep cover
Author(s):  
Yoshizo Kimura ◽  
Kensaku Sato ◽  
Yutaka Imamura ◽  
Fumiko Arakawa ◽  
Junichi Kiyasu ◽  
...  

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