scholarly journals Long-term follow-up of serum immunoglobulin levels in blinatumomab-treated patients with minimal residual disease-positive B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia

2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (9) ◽  
pp. e244-e244 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Zugmaier ◽  
M S Topp ◽  
S Alekar ◽  
A Viardot ◽  
H-A Horst ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 5348-5348
Author(s):  
Muaz Alrazzak ◽  
Beth Hill ◽  
Elizabeth A. Griffiths ◽  
Eunice S. Wang ◽  
Meir Wetzler ◽  
...  

Abstract The clinical management of patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) relies on accurate prediction of relapse hazard to determine the intensity of therapy and to avoid over- or under- treatment. Minimal residual disease (MRD) is a very effective method for predicting response to treatment and potential relapse in patients with ALL. The most validated method used to assess MRD in ALL is flow cytometric (FCM) analysis of leukemia-associated immunophenotypes which can detect up to 1 leukemic cell per 10,000 normal cells (0.01%). There is no standard method for detecting MRD by FCM in ALL patients. Our institutional approach has been to evaluate 20,000- 50,000 events using a specific immunophenotypic panel and to analyze the data using WinList software with a concurrent comparison with the diagnostic immunophenotype. GemStone™ is a new data analysis program that uses a Probability State Modeling (PSM) approach to analyze FCM data. The incorporated TriCOM technology numerically correlates all the immunophenotype combinations which can be used to detect MRD and other rare populations. In this study, we compared the GemStone and WinList analysis methods on the same patient data files. We identified 33 patients suitable for comparison by performing a retrospective review of the medical records from 2004-2010 in our pre-B cell ALL database. Patients were newly diagnosed, untreated, age ≥17 years and had FCM data available at diagnosis, week 4 (range 3-8) and week 16 (range 12-20) post therapy. We analyzed the FCM files to detect MRD using both GemStone and WinList methods separately, we subsequently reviewed the clinical course of the patients and identified those who sustained complete remission or relapsed. The clinical and FCM results were statistically correlated in Chi Square 2x2 table to identify the predictive value of each analysis method. WinList: we used CD10, CD19, CD34 and CD38 as a backbone marker set and tracked the same abnormal immunophenotype upon diagnosis in the subsequent follow up samples. GemStone: We used the same marker set and incorporate the TriCOM technology identify the MRD numerically. Figure 1 compares the outcome between GemStone and WinList methods at 16 weeks follow up. Table 1 reviews Chi Square with both method of analysis which gives comparable results. In summary, our retrospective review showed that GemStone method in detecting the MRD had comparable clinical and statistical significance to the WinList method. However, we found that the limited number of events collected (20,000) reduced our ability to completely automate the analysis process in GemStone due to intensity differences in the data. We are now conducting a prospective analysis by GemStone on ALL patients with higher number of collected events (5 x 10⁵- 2x 10⁶) Further, in our review, the MRD at 4 months post diagnosis (average 12-20 weeks) was more clinically significant than the one at 4 weeks follow up (range 3-8 weeks). Figure 1: A. Correlation between the clinical and FCM result using WinList method at 16 weeks follow up B. Correlation between the clinical and FCM result using GemStone method at 16 weeks follow up Figure 1:. A. Correlation between the clinical and FCM result using WinList method at 16 weeks follow up B. Correlation between the clinical and FCM result using GemStone method at 16 weeks follow up Abstract 5348 Table 1: comparison between WinList and GemStone method. Sensitivity Specificity PPV NPV P value Statistically significant WinList at 4 week F/U 33% 58% 23% 70% 0.49 no GemStone at 4 week F/U 44% 79% 44% 79% 0.17 no WinList at 16 week F/U 78% 58% 41% 88% 0.0323 yes GemStone at 16 week F/U 89% 67% 50% 94% 0.0022 yes Disclosures Hill: Verity Software house: Employment. Griffiths:Astex Pharmaceuticals: Research Funding; Celgene, Incyte and Alexion: Honoraria.


Blood ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 87 (12) ◽  
pp. 5251-5256 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Brisco ◽  
E Hughes ◽  
SH Neoh ◽  
PJ Sykes ◽  
K Bradstock ◽  
...  

In children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), the level of minimal residual disease (MRD) at the end of induction strongly predicts outcome, presumably because it measures both drug sensitivity and the number of leukemic cells requiring elimination. Children with high levels (> 10(-3) leukemic cells per marrow cell) nearly always relapse, whereas those with low levels (<2 x 10(-5)) seldom do. However, the importance of MRD in adult ALL is unclear. We studied 27 patients aged 14 to 74 who were treated with a standard protocol and who attained morphological remission. MRD in the marrow at first remission was quantified by using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), with the rearranged immunoglobulin heavy chain gene as a molecular marker. Levels of MRD varied from 3 x 10(-1) to <7 x 10(-7). The probability of long-term relapse-free survival was significantly related to the level of MRD and only one of nine patients with MRD >10(- 3) did not relapse. For patients who did relapse, there was an inverse relationship between MRD level and the length of remission. Overall, MRD in adults in whom a translocation had not been identified was significantly higher than in comparably-treated children, suggesting that ALL in adults is more drug-resistant than in children.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 3114-3114 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hazem A. Sayala ◽  
Paul Moreton ◽  
Ben Kennedy ◽  
Guy Lucas ◽  
Michael Leach ◽  
...  

Abstract Eradication of minimal residual disease (MRD) in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is emerging as a desirable therapeutic end point predicting for better outcome. The monoclonal antibody alemtuzumab (Mabcampath) is approved for patients with fludarabine refractory CLL. We previously published 91 patients with relapsed CLL (74 men and 17 women, median age 58 years [range, 32 to 75 years]; 44 fludarabine-refractory) who received a median of 9 weeks (range 1 to 16) of alemtuzumab, 30mg 3x a week after dose escalation, between 1996 and 2003. 84 patients had i.v. alemtuzumab and 7 received it subcutaneously. Responses to alemtuzumab according to NCI-WG criteria were complete remission (CR) in 32 patients (36%), partial remission (PR) in 17 (19%) and no response (NR) in 42 (46%). Detectable CLL to a level of less than one CLL cell in 10,000 leucocytes, assessed by four-color MRD flow cytometry, was eradicated from the blood and marrow in 18 patients (20%). 8 of these 18 patients were fludarabine refractory. We report here the results of long term follow up of this cohort of patients after a median follow up of 77 months (range 5 to 123 months). Median survival was significantly longer in patients achieving MRD negative responses compared with those with detectable CLL at the end of therapy. The median survival for all 18 MRD negative responders has not been reached but was 87 months for the 8 fludarabine-refractory patients achieving MRD negativity. Overall survival for the 18 patients with MRD-negative remissions was 66% at 72 months (see Figure). MRD positive CR patients had a median survival of 56 months, MRD positive PR patients a median survival of 42 months and non-responders a median survival of 14 months. The median treatment-free interval prior to alemtuzumab for the 18 MRD negative patients was 8 months (range 4 to 35). Excluding planned stem cell transplantation performed in CR, the median time to next treatment for the 18 MRD negative patients was 114 months and 72% (13/18) have required no further therapy. Therefore alemtuzumab can induce MRD negative remissions in CLL resulting in a clear survival advantage with 66% of MRD negative patients alive 6 years after alemtuzumab. The markedly increased treatment-free survival and excellent survival for MRD negative patients strongly suggests that achieving an MRD negative remission is an appropriate therapeutic end-point in relapsed CLL. Figure Figure


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 174-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Max S Topp ◽  
Gerhard Zugmaier ◽  
Nicola Goekbuget ◽  
Svenja Neumann ◽  
Heinz-August Horst ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 174 Blinatumomab, a bispecific, T cell-engaging (BiTE®) antibody, can effectively redirect T cells for highly selective lysis of CD19+ target cells. The B-cell differentiation antigen CD19 is a marker for B-ALL cells. In B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), persistence or relapse of minimal residual disease (MRD) is an independent poor prognostic factor, and new treatments are urgently needed. MRD relapse during or after maintenance treatment in adult standard risk patients generally heralds a hematological relapse in 90% of patients. A phase 2 study was conducted to determine the efficacy of blinatumomab in ALL patients with MRD persistence or relapse (MRD level <310-4) after induction and consolidation therapy. MRD was assessed by qRT-PCR for rearrangements of immunoglobulin (Ig) or T-cell receptor (TCR) genes, or for specific fusion genes. Blinatumomab was administered as a 4-week continuous i.v. infusion at a dose of 15 μ g/m2/d followed by a 2-week treatment free period (1 cycle). Primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with MRD response defined by individual rearrarrangement of Ig or TCR below 10-4. Patients who showed neither MRD progression nor response were permitted to receive up to 7 cycles of treatment. Patients who had achieved MRD response received 3 additional consolidation cycles. Between May 2008 and November 2009, 21 patients (16 Ph-negative; 2 patients with MLL-AF4; 5 patients with Ph+ ALL) were enrolled. The cut-off date for data analysis was May 15, 2010. Patients received between 1 and 7 cycles of blinatumomab (total of 66 cycles). Transient pyrexia (100%) and chills (43%) were the most common clinical AEs. There were no blinatumomab related deaths. Sixteen patients became MRD-negative. One patient was not evaluable due to a grade 3 adverse event (AE) leading to treatment discontinuation. Of the responding patients, 13 had never before achieved a negative MRD status on chemotherapy. Regardless of their MRD level prior to study treatment, all 16 (13/15 patients with Ph− and 3/5 patients with Ph+ ALL) became MRD-negative after the first cycle of blinatumomab. Nine patients were enrolled with a MRD load >10-2 prior to study treatment and all reached complete MRD response. Thirteen out of 16 patients with persisting MRD prior to study treatment and 3 out of 4 patients with MRD relapse showed complete MRD response. Overall relapse-free survival (RFS) currently is 78% at a median follow up of 405 days. RFS is 100% for the 8 patients who received subsequent allogeneic stem cell transplantation (median follow up 434 days). Blinatumomab is a highly active treatment for patients with MRD-positive B-lineage ALL after intensive chemotherapy and has an acceptable safety profile. T cells engaged by blinatumomab seem capable of eradicating chemotherapy-resistant tumor cells in bone marrow that otherwise might cause clinical relapse. A long RFS suggests that blinatumomab may improve outcome in patients with B-precursor ALL. A multicenter international study of blinatumomab in patients with MRD-positive B-lineage ALL has been initiated. Disclosures: Zugmaier: Micromet Inc.: Employment. Degenhard:Micromet Inc.: Employment. Schmidt:Micromet Inc.: Employment. Scheele:Micromet Inc.: Employment. Kufer:Micromet Inc.: Employment. Klinger:Micromet Inc.: Employment. Nagorsen:Micromet Inc.: Employment. Bargou:Micromet Inc.: Consultancy.


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