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Genomic breakpoint-specific monitoring of measurable residual disease in pediatric non-standard-risk acute myeloid leukemia.

Authors :
Maurer-Granofszky M
Kohrer S
Fischer S
Schumich A
Nebral K
Larghero P
Meyer C
Mecklenbrauker A
Muhlegger N
Marschalek R
Haas OA
Panzer-Grumayer R
Dworzak MN
Source :
Haematologica [Haematologica] 2024 Mar 01; Vol. 109 (3), pp. 740-750. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Mar 01.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Pediatric acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a highly heterogeneous disease making standardized measurable residual disease (MRD) assessment challenging. Currently, patient-specific DNA-based assays are only rarely applied for MRD assessment in pediatric AML. We tested whether quantification of genomic breakpoint-specific sequences via quantitative polymerase chain reaction (gDNA-PCR) provides a reliable means of MRD quantification in children with non-standardrisk AML and compared its results to those obtained with state-of-the-art ten-color flow cytometry (FCM). Breakpointspecific gDNA-PCR assays were established according to Euro-MRD consortium guidelines. FCM-MRD assessment was performed according to the European Leukemia Network guidelines with adaptations for pediatric AML. Of 77 consecutively recruited non-standard-risk pediatric AML cases, 49 (64%) carried a chromosomal translocation potentially suitable for MRD quantification. Genomic breakpoint analysis returned a specific DNA sequence in 100% (41/41) of the cases submitted for investigation. MRD levels were evaluated using gDNA-PCR in 243 follow-up samples from 36 patients, achieving a quantitative range of at least 10-4 in 231/243 (95%) of samples. Comparing gDNA-PCR with FCM-MRD data for 183 bone marrow follow-up samples at various therapy timepoints showed a high concordance of 90.2%, considering a cut-off of ≥0.1%. Both methodologies outperformed morphological assessment. We conclude that MRD monitoring by gDNA-PCR is feasible in pediatric AML with traceable genetic rearrangements and correlates well with FCM-MRD in the currently applied clinically relevant range, while being more sensitive below that. The methodology should be evaluated in larger cohorts to pave the way for clinical application.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1592-8721
Volume :
109
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Haematologica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37345487
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2022.282424