Affiliation:
1. Department of Haematology Aarhus University Hospital Aarhus Denmark
2. Department of Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine Aarhus University Hospital Aarhus Denmark
Abstract
AbstractIntroductionFollow‐up after allogeneic transplantation in acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) is guided by measurable residual disease (MRD) testing. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) is the preferred MRD platform but unfortunately, 40%–60% of AML patients have no high‐quality qPCR target. This study aimed to improve MRD testing by utilising droplet digital PCR (ddPCR). ddPCR offers patient‐specific monitoring but concerns of tracking clonal haematopoiesis rather than malignant cells prompt further validation.MethodsRetrospectively, we performed MRD testing on blood and bone marrow samples from AML patients transplanted by reduced‐intensity conditioning.ResultsThe applicability of ddPCR was 39/42 (92.9%). Forty‐five ddPCR assays were validated with a 0.0089% median sensitivity. qPCR targeting NPM1 mutation detected relapse 46 days before ddPCR (p = .03). ddPCR detected relapse 34.5 days before qPCR targeting WT1 overexpression (p = .03). In non‐relapsing patients, zero false positive ddPCR MRD relapses were observed even when monitoring targets associated with clonal haematopoiesis such as DNMT3A, TET2, and ASXL1 mutations.ConclusionThese results confirm that qPCR targeting NPM1 mutations or fusion transcripts are superior in MRD testing. In the absence of such targets, ddPCR is a promising alternative demonstrating (a) high applicability, (b) high sensitivity, and (c) zero false positive MRD relapses in non‐relapsing patients.
Funder
Dagmar Marshalls Fond
Danish Cancer Society Research Center
Eva og Henry Frænkels Mindefond
Fonden til Lægevidenskabens Fremme
Grosserer L. F. Foghts Fond
Karen Elise Jensens Fond
Jazz Pharmaceuticals
Cited by
3 articles.
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