14 results on '"Papagudi G Subramanian"'
Search Results
2. PB1949: ROLE OF LAIR1 (CD305) IN FLOW CYTOMETRIC DETECTION OF OCCULT BONE MARROW INVOLVEMENT IN NON-CLL B-CELL NON-HODGKIN LYMPHOMA
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Sitaram Ghogale, Anu Singh, Nilesh Deshpande, Karishma Girase, Harshini Sriram, Sweta Rajpal, Gaurav Chatterjee, Nikhil Patkar, Sumeet Gujral, Papagudi G Subramanian, and Prashant Tembhare
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Published
- 2023
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3. Flow cytometric evaluation of CD38 expression levels in the newly diagnosed T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and the effect of chemotherapy on its expression in measurable residual disease, refractory disease and relapsed disease: an implication for anti-CD38 immunotherapy
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Prashant Ramesh Tembhare, Harshini Sriram, Twinkle Khanka, Gaurav Chatterjee, Devasis Panda, Sitaram Ghogale, Yajamanam Badrinath, Nilesh Deshpande, Nikhil V Patkar, Gaurav Narula, Bhausaheb Bagal, Hasmukh Jain, Manju Sengar, Navin Khattry, Shripad Banavali, Sumeet Gujral, and Papagudi G Subramanian
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background Recently, anti-CD38 monoclonal antibody (Mab) therapy has become a focus of attention as an additional/alternative option for many hematological neoplasms including T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). It has been shown that antitumor efficacy of anti-CD38-Mab depends on the level of CD38 expression on tumor cells. Reports on CD38 expression in T-ALL are scarce, and data on the effect of cytotoxic chemotherapy on CD38 expression are limited to very few samples. Moreover, it lacks entirely in refractory disease and in adult T-ALL. We report the flow cytometric evaluation of CD38 expression in T-ALL blasts at diagnosis and the effect of cytotoxic chemotherapy on its expression in measurable residual disease (MRD), refractory disease (MRD≥5%), and relapsed disease in a large cohort of T-ALL.Methods The study included 347 samples (188 diagnostic, 100 MRD, 24 refractory and 35 relapse samples) from 196 (children: 85; adolescents/adults: 111) patients with T-ALL. CD38-positive blasts percentages (CD38-PBPs) and expression-intensity (mean fluorescent intensity, CD38-MFI) were studied using multicolor flow cytometry (MFC). MFC-based MRD was performed at the end-of-induction (EOI-MRD, day 30–35) and end-of-consolidation (EOC-MRD, day 78–85) subsequent follow-up (SFU-MRD) points.Results Patients were classified into early thymic precursor subtype of T-ALL (ETPALL, 54/188, 28.7%), and non-ETPALL (134/188, 71.3%). Of 188, EOI-MRD assessment was available in 152, EOC-MRD was available in 96 and SFU-MRD was available in 14 patients. CD38 was found positive in 97.9% (184/188) of diagnostic, 88.7% (110/124) MRD (including 24-refractory) and 82.9% (29/35) relapsed samples. Median (95% CI) of CD38-PBPs/MFI in diagnostic, MRD, refractory, and relapsed T-ALL samples were, respectively, 85.9% (82.10%–89.91%)/4.2 (3.88–4.47), 74.0% (58.87%–83.88%)/4.6 (3.67–6.81), 79.6% (65.25%–96.11%)/4.6 (3.33–8.47) and 85.2% (74.48%–93.01%)/5.6 (4.14–8.99). No significant difference was noted in CD38 expression between pediatric versus adult and patients with ETPALL versus non-ETPALL. No change was observed in CD38-MFI between diagnostic versus MRD and diagnostic versus relapsed paired samples. However, we noticed a mild drop in the CD38-PBPs in MRD samples compared with the diagnostic samples (p=0.016).Conclusion We report an in-depth analysis of CD38 expression in a large cohort of T-ALL at diagnosis, during chemotherapy, and at relapse. Our data demonstrated that CD38 is robustly expressed in T-ALL blasts with a little effect of cytotoxic chemotherapy making it a potentially effective target for antiCD38-Mab therapy.
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- 2020
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4. Post-induction Measurable Residual Disease Using Multicolor Flow Cytometry Is Strongly Predictive of Inferior Clinical Outcome in the Real-Life Management of Childhood T-Cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: A Study of 256 Patients
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Prashant R. Tembhare, Gaurav Narula, Twinkle Khanka, Sitaram Ghogale, Gaurav Chatterjee, Nikhil V. Patkar, Maya Prasad, Yajamanam Badrinath, Nilesh Deshpande, Pratyusha Gudapati, Shefali Verma, Mahima Sanyal, Florence Kunjachan, Gunit Mangang, Sumeet Gujral, Shripad Banavali, and Papagudi G. Subramanian
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measurable residual disease ,hyperleukocytosis ,early clearance ,T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia ,multicolor flow cytometry ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background: Measurable/minimal residual disease (MRD) status is suggested as a powerful indicator of clinical-outcome in T-cell lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma (T-ALL). Contrary to B-cell ALL, reports on T-ALL MRD are limited and mostly based on molecular methods, mainly from developed countries. Multicolor flow cytometry (MFC)-based T-ALL studies are very few. Clinically relevant cut-off levels and ideal time-point for MRD assessment are still inconclusive. In view of lack of T-ALL MRD data from the developing world, we evaluated the prognostic value of MFC-based post-induction (PI)-MRD assessment in T-ALL in the context of standard practice.Methods: We included 256 childhood-T-ALL patients (age < 15 years) treated with a modified-MCP841 protocol, which uses high-dose cytarabine during consolidation, as a part of standard hospital practice. MRD was studied using 10-color 11-antibody MFC with any level of detectable disease being considered positive. Post-induction (PI)-MRD was available in all patients, and post-consolidation (PC) MRD was available mostly in PI-MRD-positive patients (n = 88).Results: Three years cumulative-incidence-of-relapse (3years-CIR) in PI-MRD-positive patients was inferior to negative patients (46.3% vs. 18.4%). The median relapse-free-survival (RFS), event-free-survival (EFS) and overall-survival (OS) with hazard ratio (HR) of PI-MRD-positive patients were 21.4 months vs not reached (p < 0.0001, HR-4.7), 21.6 months vs. not-reached (p = 0.0003, HR-2.01) and 37.3 months vs. not reached (p = 0.026, HR-1.64) respectively. RFS, EFS and OS of patients with PI-MRD
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- 2020
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5. Transient abnormal myelopoiesis: A case series and review of the literature
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Vandana Baloda, Papagudi G. Subramanian, Yajamanam Badrinath, Ashok Kumar, Pratibha S. Kadam Amare, Shripad D. Banavali, Brijesh Arora, and Sumeet Gujral
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Transient abnormal myelopoiesis ,Down syndrome ,Immunophenotype ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Transient abnormal myelopoiesis (TAM) is a rare and unique disorder affecting Down syndrome (DS) newborns. This case series presents 5 cases of Down syndrome with TAM diagnosed during 2007–2015 with detailed analysis of immunophenotypic data of each case. CD34, CD13, CD33, CD117, CD41, CD61, CD7 and HLA-DR are useful markers for characterization of blasts of TAM.
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- 2017
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6. Pediatric cancer‐associated thrombosis: Analysis from a tertiary care cancer center in India
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Nidhi Dhariwal, Venkata Rama Mohan Gollamudi, K. P. Sangeetha, Badira Cheriyalinkal Parambil, Nirmalya Roy Moulik, Chetan Dhamne, Maya Prasad, Tushar Vora, Girish Chinnaswamy, Seema Kembhavi, Papagudi G. Subramanian, Sumeet Gujral, S. D. Banavali, and Gaurav Narula
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Oncology ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Hematology - Abstract
Thrombotic events (TEs) have been extensively studied in adult cancer patients, but data in children are limited. We prospectively analyzed pediatric cancer-associated thrombosis (PCAT) in children with malignancies.Children below 15 years of age with confirmed malignancies, treated at a large tertiary cancer center in India from July 2015 to March 2020 developing any TE were eligible. A standardized approach for detection and management was followed. Data were collected after informed consent.Of 6132 eligible children, 150 (2.44%) had 152 TEs, with median age 8.5 years and male:female of 1.83:1. Most TEs occurred on chemotherapy: 111 (74.0%). The most common site was central nervous system (CNS) 59 (39.3%), followed by upper-limb venous system 37 (24.7%). Hemato-lymphoid (HL) malignancies were more prone to PCAT than solid tumors (ST) (incidence 3.23% vs. 1.58%; odds ratio [OR] = 2.06, 95% confidence interval [CI] [1.36-2.88]; p .001). Malignancies associated with PCAT were acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) 2.94%, acute myeloid leukemia (AML) 6.66%, and non-Hodgkin lymphomas 5.35%. Response imaging done in 106 (70.7%) children showed complete to partial resolution in almost 90% children. Death was attributable to TE in seven (4.66%) children. Age above 10 years (OR 2.33, 95% CI [1.59-3.41]; p .001), AML (OR 4.62, 95% CI [1.98-10.74]; p = .0062), and non-Hodgkin lymphoma (OR 4.01, 95% CI [1.15-14.04]; p = .029) were significantly associated with TEs. In ALL, age more than 10 years (OR 1.86, 95% CI [1.06-3.24]; p .03), T-ALL (OR 3.32, 95% CI [1.69-6.54]; p = .001), and intermediate-risk group (OR 4.97, 95% CI [1.12-22.02]; p = .035) were significantly associated with thrombosis. The 2-year event-free survival (EFS) for HL malignancies with PCAT was 55.3% versus 72.1% in those without PCAT (p = .05), overall survival (OS) being 84.6% versus 80.0% (p = .32).Incidence of PCAT was 2.4%, and occurred predominantly in older children with hematolymphoid malignancies early in treatment. Most resolved completely with low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) and mortality was low. In hematolymphoid malignancies, PCAT reduce EFS, highlighting the need for prevention.
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- 2022
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7. Expression levels and patterns of B-cell maturation antigen in newly diagnosed and relapsed multiple myeloma patients from Indian subcontinent
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Harshini Sriram, Florence Kunjachan, Twinkle Khanka, Sangamitra Gawai, Sitaram Ghogale, Nilesh Deshpande, Karishma Girase, Jagruti Patil, Gaurav Chatterjee, Sweta Rajpal, Nikhil V. Patkar, Bhausaheb Bagal, Hasmukh Jain, Manju Sengar, Syed Khizer Hasan, Navin Khattry, Papagudi G. Subramanian, Sumeet Gujral, and Prashant R. Tembhare
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Adult ,Male ,Histology ,Cell Biology ,Middle Aged ,Flow Cytometry ,Immunotherapy, Adoptive ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Humans ,Female ,B-Cell Maturation Antigen ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Multiple Myeloma ,Aged - Abstract
Many novel therapies are being evaluated for the treatment of Multiple myeloma (MM). The cell-surface protein B-cell maturation antigen (BCMA, CD269) has recently emerged as a promising target for CAR-T cell and monoclonal-antibody therapies in MM. However, the knowledge of the BCMA expression-pattern in myeloma patients from the Indian subcontinent is still not available. We present an in-depth study of BCMA expression-pattern on abnormal plasma cells (aPC) in Indian MM patients.We studied BM samples from 217 MM patients (211-new and 6-relapsed) with a median age of 56 years (range, 30-78 yearsM:F-2.29) and 20 control samples. Expression levels/patterns of CD269 (clone-19f2) were evaluated in aPCs from MM patients and in normal PCs (nPC) from uninvolved staging bone marrow samples (controls) using multicolor flow cytometry (MFC). Expression-level of CD269 was determined as a ratio of mean fluorescent intensity (MFI-R) of CD269 in PCs to that of non-B-lymphocytes and expression-pattern (homogenous/heterogeneous) as coefficient-of-variation of immunofluorescence (CVIF).Median (range) percentage of CD269-positive abnormal-PCs in total PCs was 71.6% (0.49-99.29%). The MFI-R (median, range) of CD269 was significantly higher in aPCs (4.13, 1.12-26.88) than nPCs (3.33, 1.23-12.87), p .0001. Median (range) MFI of CD269 at diagnosis and relapse were 2.39 (0.77-9.57) and 2.66 (2.15-3.23) respectively. CD269 levels were similar at diagnosis and relapse, p = .5529.We demonstrated that BCMA/CD269 is highly expressed in aPCs from a majority of MM patients, both at diagnosis and relapse. Thus, BCMA is a valuable target for therapy for Indian MM patients.
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- 2022
8. Critical Role of Flow Cytometric Immunophenotyping in the Diagnosis, Subtyping, and Staging of T-Cell/NK-Cell Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma in Real-World Practice: A Study of 232 Cases From a Tertiary Cancer Center in India
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Prashant R. Tembhare, Gaurav Chatterjee, Anumeha Chaturvedi, Niharika Dasgupta, Twinkle Khanka, Shefali Verma, Sitaram G. Ghogale, Nilesh Deshpande, Karishma Girase, Manju Sengar, Bhausaheb Bagal, Hasmukh Jain, Dhanalaxmi Shetty, Sweta Rajpal, Nikhil Patkar, Tushar Agrawal, Sridhar Epari, Tanuja Shet, Papagudi G. Subramanian, and Sumeet Gujral
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Cancer Research ,Oncology ,immune system diseases ,hemic and lymphatic diseases - Abstract
BackgroundT-cell/NK-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (T/NK-NHL) is an uncommon heterogeneous group of diseases. The current classification of T/NK-NHL is mainly based on histopathology and immunohistochemistry. In practice, however, the lack of unique histopathological patterns, overlapping cytomorphology, immunophenotypic complexity, inadequate panels, and diverse clinical presentations pose a great challenge. Flow cytometric immunophenotyping (FCI) is a gold standard for the diagnosis, subtyping, and monitoring of many hematological neoplasms. However, studies emphasizing the role of FCI in the diagnosis and staging of T/NK-NHL in real-world practice are scarce.MethodsWe included T-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (T-NHL) patients evaluated for the diagnosis and/or staging of T/NK-NHL using FCI between 2014 and 2020. We studied the utility of FCI in the diagnosis and subtyping of T/NK-NHL and correlated the FCI findings with the results of histopathology/immunohistochemistry. For correlation purposes, patients were categorized under definitive diagnosis and subtyping, inadequate subtyping, inadequate diagnosis, and misdiagnosis based on the findings of each technique.ResultsA total of 232 patients were diagnosed with T/NK-NHL. FCI findings provided definitive diagnoses in 198 patients and subtyping in 187/198 (95.45%) patients. The correlation between FCI and histopathological/immunohistochemistry results (n = 150) demonstrated an agreement on the diagnosis and subtyping in 69/150 (46%) patients. Of the remaining cases, the diagnosis and subtyping were inadequate in 64/150 (42.7%), and 14/150 (9.33%) were misdiagnosed on histopathology/immunohistochemistry results. FCI provided definitive diagnosis and subtyping in 51/64 (79.7%) patients. Among these, 13 patients diagnosed with peripheral T-cell lymphoma not-otherwise-specified were reclassified (angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL)-11 and prolymphocytic leukemia-2) on FCI. It corrected the diagnosis in 14 patients that were misdiagnosed (6 B-cell NHL (B-NHL), 3 Hodgkin’s lymphoma, 1 acute leukemia, and 1 subcutaneous panniculitis-like T-cell lymphoma) and misclassified (3 T-NHL) on histopathological results. AITL was the commonest T-NHL misclassified on histopathological results. FCI also confirmed the definite involvement in 7/83 (8.4%) and 27/83 (32.5%) bone marrow (BM) samples reported as suspicious and uninvolved, respectively, on histopathological evaluation.ConclusionAITL was the most frequently diagnosed T/NK-NHL in this study. FCI provided a distinct advantage in detecting BM involvement by T/NK-NHL, especially in patients with low-level involvement. Overall, our study concluded that FCI plays a critical role in the diagnosis, subtyping, and staging of T/NK-NHL in real-world practice.
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- 2021
9. A High‐Sensitivity 10‐Color Flow Cytometric Minimal Residual Disease Assay in B‐Lymphoblastic Leukemia/Lymphoma Can Easily Achieve the Sensitivity of 2‐in‐10 6 and Is Superior to Standard Minimal Residual Disease Assay: A Study of 622 Patients
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Karishma Girase, Yajamanam Badrinath, Rahul Shukla, Dilshad Dhaliwal, Gaurav Narula, Papagudi G Subramanian Pg, Maya Prasad, Prashant Tembhare, Sumeet Gujral, Nilesh Deshpande, Shripad Banavali, Sitaram Ghogale, Pearl Rodrigues, Dhanalaxmi Shetty, Gaurav Chatterjee, Nikhil Patkar, and Avinash Gupta
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0301 basic medicine ,Histology ,business.industry ,B Lymphoblastic Leukemia/Lymphoma ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,Minimal residual disease ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Lymphoma ,Highly sensitive ,body regions ,03 medical and health sciences ,Leukemia ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine ,Color flow ,Bone marrow ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Cytometry - Abstract
BACKGROUND Flow-cytometric minimal residual disease (FC-MRD) monitoring is a well-established risk-stratification factor in B-lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma (-B-ALL) and is being considered as a basis for deintensification or escalation in treatment protocols. However, currently practiced standard FC-MRD has limited sensitivity (up to 0.01%) and higher false MRD-negative rate. Hence, a highly sensitive, widely applicable, and easily reproducible FC-MRD assay is needed, which can provide a reliable basis for therapeutic modifications. METHODS A 10-color high-event analysis FC-MRD assay was studied for the evaluation of MRD status at postinduction, (PI; day-35), postconsolidation, (PC; day-78), and subsequent follow-up time-points (SFU) in bone marrow samples from pediatric B-ALL. RESULTS One-thousand MRD samples (PI-62.2%; PC-26.5%; and SFU-11.3%) from 622 childhood B-ALL patients were studied. High-event analysis was performed with median 4,452,000 events (range, 839,000 to 8,866,000 events) and >4 million events in 71% samples. MRD was measurable in 43.2% of PI-samples, in 29.4% PC-samples, and in 32.7% SFU-samples. To simulate comparison with standard FC-MRD, we reanalyzed MRD results gating only first 500,000 and first 1000,000 events in 122 PI-MRD positive samples with MRD levels
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- 2019
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10. A High-Sensitivity 10-Color Flow Cytometric Minimal Residual Disease Assay in B-Lymphoblastic Leukemia/Lymphoma Can Easily Achieve the Sensitivity of 2-in-10
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Prashant R, Tembhare, Papagudi G, Subramanian Pg, Sitaram, Ghogale, Gaurav, Chatterjee, Nikhil V, Patkar, Avinash, Gupta, Rahul, Shukla, Yajamanam, Badrinath, Nilesh, Deshpande, Gaurav, Narula, Pearl, Rodrigues, Karishma, Girase, Dilshad, Dhaliwal, Maya, Prasad, Dhanalaxmi, Shetty, Shripad, Banavali, and Sumeet, Gujral
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Male ,Neoplasm, Residual ,Adolescent ,Bone Marrow ,Child, Preschool ,Precursor B-Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma ,Humans ,Infant ,Female ,Child ,Flow Cytometry ,Sensitivity and Specificity - Abstract
Flow-cytometric minimal residual disease (FC-MRD) monitoring is a well-established risk-stratification factor in B-lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma (-B-ALL) and is being considered as a basis for deintensification or escalation in treatment protocols. However, currently practiced standard FC-MRD has limited sensitivity (up to 0.01%) and higher false MRD-negative rate. Hence, a highly sensitive, widely applicable, and easily reproducible FC-MRD assay is needed, which can provide a reliable basis for therapeutic modifications.A 10-color high-event analysis FC-MRD assay was studied for the evaluation of MRD status at postinduction, (PI; day-35), postconsolidation, (PC; day-78), and subsequent follow-up time-points (SFU) in bone marrow samples from pediatric B-ALL.One-thousand MRD samples (PI-62.2%; PC-26.5%; and SFU-11.3%) from 622 childhood B-ALL patients were studied. High-event analysis was performed with median 4,452,000 events (range, 839,000 to 8,866,000 events) and 4 million events in 71% samples. MRD was measurable in 43.2% of PI-samples, in 29.4% PC-samples, and in 32.7% SFU-samples. To simulate comparison with standard FC-MRD, we reanalyzed MRD results gating only first 500,000 and first 1000,000 events in 122 PI-MRD positive samples with MRD levels0.02%. Of these samples gated for 500,000 events and 1000,000 events, 32% and 21.3% were found to be falsely MRD-negative, respectively.We report an easily reproducible high-sensitivity 10-color FC-MRD assay with the sensitivity of 2-in-10
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- 2019
11. Evaluation of CD229 as a new alternative plasma cell gating marker in the flow cytometric immunophenotyping of monoclonal gammopathies
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Prashant R, Tembhare, Sitaram, Ghogale, Wilma, Tauro, Yajamanam, Badrinath, Nilesh, Deshpande, Shweta, Kedia, Keziah, Cherian, Nikhil V, Patkar, Gaurav, Chatterjee, Sumeet, Gujral, and Papagudi G, Subramanian
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Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Plasma Cells ,Paraproteinemias ,Middle Aged ,Flow Cytometry ,Immunophenotyping ,Bone Marrow ,Signaling Lymphocytic Activation Molecule Family ,Case-Control Studies ,Humans ,Female ,Immunoglobulin Light Chains ,Biomarkers ,Aged - Abstract
Current flow-cytometric plasma cell (PC) gating is based on CD138, CD38, and CD45 expression. CD138 is known for variable expression and loss during storage and processing. Introduction of anti-CD38 and anti-CD138 monoclonal-antibody therapies has limited the use of these markers during follow-up. Hence, additional reliable PC-gating markers are required. Recently, CD229 has been claimed as an alternative PC-gating marker. However, these studies are limited to a small cohort of samples. We evaluated the utility of CD229 as a new PC-gating marker in routine laboratory practice.Expression of CD229 was studied in 310 bone marrow (BM) samples (251 plasma-cell disorders and 59 controls) and compared with CD138 and CD38 expression. We also evaluated the effect of additional processing for cytoplasmic immunoglobulin-light-chains (CyIgL) staining on the quantitation of PC.Expression of CD229 was consistently stronger on PC than other hematopoietic-cells (p 0.001). PC-percentages using CD229 in combination with CD38 or CD138 and CD45 revealed high correlation with a reference gating-strategy using CD138, CD38 and CD45 (r = 0.98, r = 0.99 r = 0.99 respectively) and r = 0.92 using CD229 and CD45 without CD38 or CD138. In contrast, CD138 expression showed significant variability (CV-MFI, 97.5) and loss from PC in 53% of samples. Quantitation of PC was found to be lower in 69.3% and higher in 30.7% samples processed for CyIgL-staining as compared to surface-staining.CD229 is a reliable new alternative PC-gating marker in routine laboratory practice. Quantitation of PC based on CD138 expression or from samples processed for CyIgL-staining should be used with caution. © 2018 International Clinical Cytometry Society.
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- 2017
12. Evaluation of new markers for minimal residual disease monitoring in B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia: CD73 and CD86 are the most relevant new markers to increase the efficacy of MRD 2016; 00B: 000-000
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Prashant R, Tembhare, Sitaram, Ghogale, Nisha, Ghatwai, Yajamanam, Badrinath, Nikesh, Kunder, Nikhil V, Patkar, Asma R, Bibi, Gaurav, Chatterjee, Brijesh, Arora, Gaurav, Narula, Shripad, Banawali, Nilesh, Deshpande, Prathibha, Amare, Sumeet, Gujral, and Papagudi G, Subramanian
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Adult ,Male ,B-Lymphocytes ,Neoplasm, Residual ,Adolescent ,Infant ,Flow Cytometry ,GPI-Linked Proteins ,Immunophenotyping ,Young Adult ,Bone Marrow ,Child, Preschool ,Precursor B-Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Humans ,Female ,B7-2 Antigen ,Child ,5'-Nucleotidase - Abstract
Multiparametric flow cytometry (MFC) is a popular technique for minimal residual disease (MRD) analysis. However, its applicability is still limited to 90% of B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCPALL) due to two major issues, i.e. a proportion of cases do not express adequate leukemia associated immunophenotype (LAIPs) with currently used markers and drug-induced antigen modulation. Hence, the incorporation of additional reliable markers is required for the further improvement of MFC-based MRD evaluation. We studied the utility of new markers in improvising MFC-based MRD detection in BCPALL.Expression-patterns of six new markers, i.e. CD24, CD44, CD72, CD73, CD86, and CD200 were studied in leukemic-blasts from ninety childhood BCPALL patients and in hematogones from 20 uninvolved staging bone marrow (BM) and ten postinduction non-BCPALL BM samples using eight-color MFC. The utility of these new markers in the day 35 postinduction MRD evaluation was determined.Frequencies of LAIPs of CD73, CD86, CD72, CD44, CD200, and CD24 in diagnostic samples were 76.7, 56.7, 55.6, 50, 28.9, and 20%, respectively. Differential expression of all new markers was highly significant (P 0.01) between early (CD10+ CD19+ CD34+) hematogones, late (CD10+ CD19+ CD34-) hematogones and BCPALL blasts except between early hematogones and BCPALL blasts for CD200 (P = 0.1). In MRD-positive samples, CD73 showed the maximum (83%) frequency of LAIP and CD86 showed the highest (100%) stability of aberrant expression. Inclusion of CD73 and CD86 increased the applicability of MFC-MRD assay to 98.9% MRD samples.CD73 and CD86 are the most relevant markers to incorporate in the routine MRD evaluation of BCPALL. © 2016 International Clinical Cytometry Society.
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- 2016
13. Circulating tumor plasma cells and peripheral blood measurable residual disease assessment in multiple myeloma patients not planned for upfront transplant
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Prashant R. Tembhare, Harshini Sriram, Twinkle Khanka, Sanghamitra Gawai, Bhausaheb Bagal, Sitaram G. Ghogale, Nilesh Deshpande, Karishma Girase, Jagruti Patil, Syed Khaizer Hasan, Dhanalaxmi Shetty, Kinjalka Ghosh, Gaurav Chatterjee, Sweta Rajpal, Nikhil V. Patkar, Hasmukh Jain, Sachin Punatar, Anant Gokarn, Lingaraj Nayak, Sumeet Mirgh, Nishant Jindal, Manju Sengar, Navin Khattry, Papagudi G. Subramanian, and Sumeet Gujral
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Abstract Circulating tumor plasma cells (CTPCs) provide a noninvasive alternative for measuring tumor burden in newly diagnosed multiple myeloma (NDMM). Moreover, measurable residual disease (MRD) assessment in peripheral blood (PBMRD) can provide an ideal alternative to bone marrow MRD, which is limited by its painful nature and technical challenges. However, the clinical significance of PBMRD in NDMM still remains uncertain. Additionally, data on CTPC in NDMM patients not treated with transplant are scarce. We prospectively studied CTPC and PBMRD in 141 NDMM patients using highly sensitive multicolor flow cytometry (HS‐MFC). PBMRD was monitored at the end of three cycles (PBMRD1) and six cycles (PBMRD2) of chemotherapy in patients with detectable baseline CTPC. Patients received bortezomib‐based triplet therapy and were not planned for an upfront transplant. Among baseline risk factors, CTPC ≥ 0.01% was independently associated with poor progression‐free survival (PFS) (hazard ratio [HR] = 2.77; p = 0.0047) and overall survival (OS) (HR = 2.9; p = 0.023) on multivariate analysis. In patients with detectable baseline CTPC, undetectable PBMRD at both subsequent time points was associated with longer PFS (HR = 0.46; p = 0.0037), whereas detectable PBMRD at any time point was associated with short OS (HR = 3.25; p = 0.004). Undetectable combined PBMRD (PBMRD1 and PBMRD2) outperformed the serum‐immunofixation‐based response. On multivariate analysis, detectable PBMRD at any time point was independently associated with poor PFS (HR = 2.0; p = 0.025) and OS (HR = 3.97; p = 0.013). Thus, our findings showed that CTPC and PBMRD assessment using HS‐MFC provides a robust, noninvasive biomarker for NDMM patients not planned for an upfront transplant. Sequential PBMRD monitoring has great potential to improve the impact of the existing risk stratification and response assessment models.
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- 2024
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14. Critical Role of Flow Cytometric Immunophenotyping in the Diagnosis, Subtyping, and Staging of T-Cell/NK-Cell Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma in Real-World Practice: A Study of 232 Cases From a Tertiary Cancer Center in India
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Prashant R. Tembhare, Gaurav Chatterjee, Anumeha Chaturvedi, Niharika Dasgupta, Twinkle Khanka, Shefali Verma, Sitaram G. Ghogale, Nilesh Deshpande, Karishma Girase, Manju Sengar, Bhausaheb Bagal, Hasmukh Jain, Dhanalaxmi Shetty, Sweta Rajpal, Nikhil Patkar, Tushar Agrawal, Sridhar Epari, Tanuja Shet, Papagudi G. Subramanian, and Sumeet Gujral
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immunophenotyping ,T cell ,non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma ,real-world practice ,flow cytometry ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
BackgroundT-cell/NK-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (T/NK-NHL) is an uncommon heterogeneous group of diseases. The current classification of T/NK-NHL is mainly based on histopathology and immunohistochemistry. In practice, however, the lack of unique histopathological patterns, overlapping cytomorphology, immunophenotypic complexity, inadequate panels, and diverse clinical presentations pose a great challenge. Flow cytometric immunophenotyping (FCI) is a gold standard for the diagnosis, subtyping, and monitoring of many hematological neoplasms. However, studies emphasizing the role of FCI in the diagnosis and staging of T/NK-NHL in real-world practice are scarce.MethodsWe included T-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (T-NHL) patients evaluated for the diagnosis and/or staging of T/NK-NHL using FCI between 2014 and 2020. We studied the utility of FCI in the diagnosis and subtyping of T/NK-NHL and correlated the FCI findings with the results of histopathology/immunohistochemistry. For correlation purposes, patients were categorized under definitive diagnosis and subtyping, inadequate subtyping, inadequate diagnosis, and misdiagnosis based on the findings of each technique.ResultsA total of 232 patients were diagnosed with T/NK-NHL. FCI findings provided definitive diagnoses in 198 patients and subtyping in 187/198 (95.45%) patients. The correlation between FCI and histopathological/immunohistochemistry results (n = 150) demonstrated an agreement on the diagnosis and subtyping in 69/150 (46%) patients. Of the remaining cases, the diagnosis and subtyping were inadequate in 64/150 (42.7%), and 14/150 (9.33%) were misdiagnosed on histopathology/immunohistochemistry results. FCI provided definitive diagnosis and subtyping in 51/64 (79.7%) patients. Among these, 13 patients diagnosed with peripheral T-cell lymphoma not-otherwise-specified were reclassified (angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma (AITL)-11 and prolymphocytic leukemia-2) on FCI. It corrected the diagnosis in 14 patients that were misdiagnosed (6 B-cell NHL (B-NHL), 3 Hodgkin’s lymphoma, 1 acute leukemia, and 1 subcutaneous panniculitis-like T-cell lymphoma) and misclassified (3 T-NHL) on histopathological results. AITL was the commonest T-NHL misclassified on histopathological results. FCI also confirmed the definite involvement in 7/83 (8.4%) and 27/83 (32.5%) bone marrow (BM) samples reported as suspicious and uninvolved, respectively, on histopathological evaluation.ConclusionAITL was the most frequently diagnosed T/NK-NHL in this study. FCI provided a distinct advantage in detecting BM involvement by T/NK-NHL, especially in patients with low-level involvement. Overall, our study concluded that FCI plays a critical role in the diagnosis, subtyping, and staging of T/NK-NHL in real-world practice.
- Published
- 2022
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