The impact of Down syndrome-specific non-malignant hematopoietic regeneration in the bone marrow on the detection of leukemic measurable residual disease
Fan-Chi Hsu, Chad Hudson, Elisabeth R. Wilson, Laura M. Pardo, Timothy P. Singleton, Dongbin Xu, Barbara K. Zehentner, Johann Hitzler, Jason Berman, Denise A. Wells, Michael R. Loken, Lisa Eidenschink Brodersen
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引用次数: 2
Abstract
Background
Detection of measurable residual disease detection (MRD) by flow cytometry after the first course of chemotherapy is a standard measure of early response in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Myeloid leukemia associated with Down Syndrome (ML-DS) is a distinct form of AML. Differences in steady-state and regenerating hematopoiesis between patients with or without DS are not well understood. This understanding is essential to accurately determine the presence of residual leukemia in patients with ML-DS.
Methods
A standardized antibody panel defined quantitative antigen expression in 115 follow-up bone marrow (BM) aspirates from 45 patients following chemotherapy for ML-DS or DS precursor B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL-DS) with the “difference from normal (ΔN)” technique. When possible, FISH and SNP/CGH microarray studies were performed on sorted cell fractions.
Results
93% of BM specimens submitted post chemotherapy had a clearly identifiable CD34+CD56+ population present between 0.06% and 2.6% of total non-erythroid cells. An overlapping CD34+HLA-DRheterogeneous population was observed among 92% of patients at a lower frequency (0.04%–0.8% of total non-erythroid cells). In B-ALL-DS patients, the same CD34+CD56+ HLA-DRheterogeneous expression was observed. FACS-FISH/Array studies demonstrated no residual genetic clones in the DS-specific myeloid progenitor cells.
Conclusions
Non-malignant myeloid progenitors in the regenerating BM of patients who have undergone chemotherapy for either ML-DS or B-ALL-DS express an immunophenotype that is different from normal BM of non-DS patients. Awareness of this DS-specific non-malignant myeloid progenitor is essential to the interpretation of MRD by flow cytometry in patients with ML-DS.
期刊介绍:
Cytometry Part B: Clinical Cytometry features original research reports, in-depth reviews and special issues that directly relate to and palpably impact clinical flow, mass and image-based cytometry. These may include clinical and translational investigations important in the diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic management of patients. Thus, we welcome research papers from various disciplines related [but not limited to] hematopathologists, hematologists, immunologists and cell biologists with clinically relevant and innovative studies investigating individual-cell analytics and/or separations. In addition to the types of papers indicated above, we also welcome Letters to the Editor, describing case reports or important medical or technical topics relevant to our readership without the length and depth of a full original report.