Flow cytometric minimal residual disease measurement accounting for cytogenetics in children with non‐high‐risk acute lymphoblastic leukemia treated according to the ALL‐MB 2008 protocol

Author:

Popov Alexander1ORCID,Henze Guenter2,Tsaur Grigory345,Budanov Oleg1,Roumiantseva Julia1,Belevtsev Mikhail6,Verzhbitskaya Tatiana34,Movchan Liudmila6,Lagoyko Svetlana1,Zharikova Liudmila1,Olshanskaya Yulia1,Riger Tatiana3,Valochnik Alena6,Miakova Natalia1,Litvinov Dmitry1,Khlebnikova Olga3,Streneva Olga34,Stolyarova Elena5,Ponomareva Natalia7,Novichkova Galina1,Aleinikova Olga1,Fechina Larisa34,Karachunskiy Alexander1

Affiliation:

1. National Research and Clinical Center for Pediatric Hematology, Oncology and Immunology Moscow Russian Federation

2. Department of Pediatric Oncology Hematology Charité—Universitätsmedizin Berlin Berlin Germany

3. Regional Children's Hospital Ekaterinburg Russian Federation

4. Research Institute of Medical Cell Technologies Ekaterinburg Russian Federation

5. Ural State Medical University Ekaterinburg Russian Federation

6. Republican Scientific and Practical Center for Pediatric Oncology Hematology and Immunology Minsk Belarus

7. Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University Moscow Russian Federation

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundQuantitative measurement of minimal residual disease (MRD) is the “gold standard” for estimating the response to therapy in childhood B‐cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP‐ALL). Nevertheless, the speed of the MRD response differs for different cytogenetic subgroups. Here we present results of MRD measurement in children with BCP‐ALL, in terms of genetic subgroups with relation to clinically defined risk groups.MethodsA total of 485 children with non‐high‐risk BCP‐ALL with available cytogenetic data and MRD studied at the end‐of‐induction (EOI) by multicolor flow cytometry (MFC) were included. All patients were treated with standard‐risk (SR) of intermediate‐risk (ImR) regimens of “ALL‐MB 2008” reduced‐intensity protocol.Results and DiscussionAmong all study group patients, 203 were found to have low‐risk cytogenetics (ETV6::RUNX1 or high hyperdiploidy), while remaining 282 children were classified in intermediate cytogenetic risk group. For the patients with favorable and intermediate risk cytogenetics, the most significant thresholds for MFC‐MRD values were different: 0.03% and 0.04% respectively. Nevertheless, the most meaningful thresholds were different for clinically defined SR and ImR groups. For the SR group, irrespective to presence/absence of favorable genetic lesions, MFC‐MRD threshold of 0.1% was the most clinically valuable, although for ImR group the most informative thresholds were different in patients from low‐(0.03%) and intermediate (0.01%) cytogenetic risk groups.ConclusionOur data show that combining clinical risk factors with MFC‐MRD measurement is the most useful tool for risk group stratification of children with BCP‐ALL in the reduced‐intensity protocols. However, this algorithm can be supplemented with cytogenetic data for part of the ImR group.

Publisher

Wiley

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