A simplified minimal residual disease polymerase chain reaction method at early treatment points can stratify children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia into good and poor outcome groups

Autor: Carlos A. Scrideli, Juliana G. Assumpção, Mônica A. Ganazza, Marcela Araújo, Silvia R. Toledo, Maria Lúcia M. Lee, Elisabete Delbuono, Antonio S. Petrilli, Rosane P. Queiróz, Andrea Biondi, Marcos B. Viana, José A. Yunes, Silvia R. Brandalise, Luiz G. Tone
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2009
Předmět:
Zdroj: Haematologica, Vol 94, Iss 6 (2009)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 0390-6078
1592-8721
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2008.003137
Popis: Background Minimal residual disease is an important independent prognostic factor in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The classical detection methods such as multiparameter flow cytometry and real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction analysis are expensive, time-consuming and complex, and require considerable technical expertise.Design and Methods We analyzed 229 consecutive children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia treated according to the GBTLI-99 protocol at three different Brazilian centers. Minimal residual disease was analyzed in bone marrow samples at diagnosis and on days 14 and 28 by conventional homo/heteroduplex polymerase chain reaction using a simplified approach with consensus primers for IG and TCR gene rearrangements.Results At least one marker was detected by polymerase chain reaction in 96.4% of the patients. By combining the minimal residual disease results obtained on days 14 and 28, three different prognostic groups were identified: minimal residual disease negative on days 14 and 28, positive on day 14/negative on day 28, and positive on both. Five-year event-free survival rates were 85%, 75.6%, and 27.8%, respectively (p
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