Back to Search Start Over

Impact of Specimen Heterogeneity on Biomarkers in Repository Samples from Patients with Acute Myeloid Leukemia: A SWOG Report

Authors :
Frederick R. Appelbaum
Jerald P. Radich
John E. Godwin
Era L. Pogosova-Agadjanyan
Min Fang
I-Ming L. Chen
Derek L. Stirewalt
Cheryl L. Willman
Alan F. List
Kenneth J. Kopecky
Harry P. Erba
Thomas R. Chauncey
Brent L. Wood
Megan Othus
Anna Moseley
Galina Pogosov
Soheil Meshinchi
Source :
Biopreservation and Biobanking. 16:42-52
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert Inc, 2018.

Abstract

Current prognostic models for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) are inconsistent at predicting clinical outcomes for individual patients. Variability in the quality of specimens utilized for biomarker discovery and validation may contribute to this prognostic inconsistency.We evaluated the impact of sample heterogeneity on prognostic biomarkers and methods to mitigate any adverse effects of this heterogeneity in 240 cryopreserved bone marrow and peripheral blood specimens from AML patients enrolled on SWOG (Southwest Oncology Group) trials.Cryopreserved samples displayed a broad range in viability (37% with viabilities ≤60%) and nonleukemic cell contamination (13% with lymphocyte percentages20%). Specimen viability was impacted by transport time, AML immunophenotype, and, potentially, patients' age. The viability and cellular heterogeneity in unsorted samples significantly altered biomarker results. Enriching for viable AML blasts improved the RNA quality from specimens with poor viability and refined results for both DNA and RNA biomarkers. For example, FLT3-ITD allelic ratio, which is currently utilized to risk-stratify AML patients, was on average 1.49-fold higher in the viable AML blasts than in the unsorted specimens.To our knowledge, this is the first study to provide evidence that using cryopreserved specimens can introduce uncontrollable variables that may impact biomarker results and enrichment for viable AML blasts may mitigate this impact.

Details

ISSN :
19475543 and 19475535
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biopreservation and Biobanking
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ce3484fa96f8f96694d1264e4bd18c43