Multiple Myeloma Minimal Residual Disease Detection: Targeted Mass Spectrometry in Blood vs Next-Generation Sequencing in Bone Marrow

Author:

Langerhorst Pieter1,Noori Somayya2ORCID,Zajec Marina23,De Rijke Yolanda B3,Gloerich Jolein1,van Gool Alain J1,Caillon Hélène4,Joosten Irma1,Luider Theo M2,Corre Jill5,VanDuijn Martijn M2,Dejoie Thomas4,Jacobs Joannes F M1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Laboratory Medicine, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, the Netherlands

2. Department of Neurology, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands

3. Department of Clinical Chemistry, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands

4. Laboratoire de Biochimie, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire (CHU), Nantes, France

5. Unité de Génomique du Myélome, Institute Universitaire du Cancer de Toulouse Oncopole, Toulouse, France

Abstract

Abstract Background Minimal residual disease (MRD) status assessed on bone marrow aspirates is a major prognostic biomarker in multiple myeloma (MM). In this study we evaluated blood-based targeted mass spectrometry (MS-MRD) as a sensitive, minimally invasive alternative to measure MM disease activity. Methods Therapy response of 41 MM patients in the IFM-2009 clinical trial (NCT01191060) was assessed with MS-MRD on frozen sera and compared to routine state-of-the-art monoclonal protein (M-protein) diagnostics and next-generation sequencing (NGS-MRD) at 2 time points. Results In all 41 patients we were able to identify clonotypic M-protein-specific peptides and perform serum-based MS-MRD measurements. MS-MRD is significantly more sensitive to detect M-protein compared to either electrophoretic M-protein diagnostics or serum free light chain analysis. The concordance between NGS-MRD and MS-MRD status in 81 paired bone marrow/sera samples was 79%. The 50% progression-free survival (PFS) was identical (49 months) for patients who were either NGS-positive or MS-positive directly after maintenance treatment. The 50% PFS was 69 and 89 months for NGS-negative and MS-negative patients, respectively. The longest 50% PFS (96 months) was observed in patients who were MRD-negative for both methods. MS-MRD relapse during maintenance treatment was significantly correlated to poor PFS (P < 0.0001). Conclusions Our data indicate proof-of-principle that MS-MRD evaluation in blood is a feasible, patient friendly alternative to NGS-MRD assessed on bone marrow. Clinical validation of the prognostic value of MS-MRD and its complementary value in MRD-evaluation of patients with MM is warranted in an independent larger cohort.

Funder

Dutch Cancer Society

Sebia and an e-Infrastructure grant of the Dutch Research Counsel

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Biochemistry, medical,Clinical Biochemistry

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