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Title: Prospective monitoring of minimal residual disease during the course of chemotherapy in patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and detection of contaminating tumor cells in peripheral blood stem cells for autotransplantation. Author: Seriu T, Yokota S, Nakao M, Misawa S, Takaue Y, Koizumi S, Kawai S, Fujimoto T. Journal: Leukemia; 1995 Apr; 9(4):615-23. PubMed ID: 7723394. Abstract: A prospective study for detecting minimal residual disease (MRD) was conducted on children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Thirty-nine patients (38 B-lineage ALL, one T-ALL) with TCR delta rearrangements could be followed for 21 to 44 months (mean 30.9 months) excluding four patients who died. One hundred and ninety four bone marrow (BM) samples and 13 peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC) grafts were available for detection of MRD. Initially 34 cases were treated prospectively according to the CCLSG risk-stratified protocols for ALL (ALL874 or ALL911), and five cases according to the other protocols. Conventional chemotherapy was replaced by autologous PBSC transplantation (PBSCT) in five patients, by allogenic BM transplantation (BMT) in one patient, or suspended in another patient. Twenty-nine of 32 children in whom conventional chemotherapy could be continued without interruption remain in complete remission (CR). In 24 of the 29 patients MRD became undetectable within 12 months of their diagnosis. In five cases, BM samples obtained during maintenance therapy exhibited residual leukemia cells, and yet none of them relapsed (mean follow-up period 28.6 months). Our results thus indicate that intensive maintenance therapy for patients with PCR-positive results during consolidation therapy may prevent subsequent relapse. Nine events of relapse were diagnosed in eight patients (five BM, two isolated central nervous system (CNS), one combined BM and CNS, one isolated skin relapse). An increase or a re-emergence of MRD was detected in BM samples obtained from patients prior to BM relapse, but one patient remained in CR despite reappearance of leukemic cells following a PCR-negative status. Monitoring of MRD failed to predict isolated CNS or skin relapse. PBSCT allows high-dose cytoreduction therapy for patients with refractory neoplasia. In our study, leukemic cells were identified in eight of 13 PBSC grafts harvested from five patients. Three of four children who received PBSC grafts containing leukemic cells relapsed within 6 months after PBSCT. Monitoring of MRD as part of quality control of PBSC grafts may ultimately contribute to improvements in PBSCT procedures.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]