39 results on '"Jurcek, T"'
Search Results
2. Correction: Standardisation and consensus guidelines for minimal residual disease assessment in Philadelphia-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph+ALL) by real-time quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR of e1a2 BCR-ABL1
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Pfeifer, H., Cazzaniga, G., van der Velden, V. H. J., Cayuela, J. M., Schäfer, B., Spinelli, O., Akiki, S., Avigad, S., Bendit, I., Borg, K., Cavé, H., Elia, L., Reshmi, S. C., Gerrard, G., Hayette, S., Hermanson, M., Juh, A., Jurcek, T., Chillón, M. C., Homburg, C., Martinelli, G., Kairisto, V., Lange, T., Lion, T., Mueller, M. C., Pane, F., Rai, L., Damm-Welk, C., Sacha, T., Schnittger, S., Touloumenidou, T., Valerhaugen, H., Vandenberghe, P., Zuna, J., Serve, H., Herrmann, E., Markovic, S., van Dongen, J. J. M., and Ottmann, O. G.
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- 2020
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3. Standardization of molecular monitoring of CML : results and recommendations from the European treatment and outcome study
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White HE, Salmon M, Albano F, Andersen CSA, Balabanov S, Balatzenko G, Barbany G, Cayuela JM, Cerveira N, Cochaux P, Colomer D, Coriu D, Diamond J, Dietz C, Dulucq S, Engvall M, Franke GN, Gineikiene-Valentine E, Gniot M, Gómez-Casares MT, Gottardi E, Hayden C, Hayette S, Hedblom A, Ilea A, Izzo B, Jiménez-Velasco A, Jurcek T, Kairisto V, Langabeer SE, Lion T, Meggyesi N, Mešanović S, Mihok L, Mitterbauer-Hohendanner G, Moeckel S, Naumann N, Nibourel O, Oppliger Leibundgut E, Panayiotidis P, Podgornik H, Pott C, Rapado I, Rose SJ, Schäfer V, Touloumenidou T, Veigaard C, Venniker-Punt B, Venturi C, Vigneri P, Vorkinn I, Wilkinson E, Zadro R, Zawada M, Zizkova H, Müller MC, Saussele S, Ernst T, Machova Polakova K, Hochhaus A, Cross NCPa 62, Andreas Hochhaus 52, Nicholas C P Cross, White, He, Salmon, M, Albano, F, Andersen, Csa, Balabanov, S, Balatzenko, G, Barbany, G, Cayuela, Jm, Cerveira, N, Cochaux, P, Colomer, D, Coriu, D, Diamond, J, Dietz, C, Dulucq, S, Engvall, M, Franke, Gn, Gineikiene-Valentine, E, Gniot, M, Gómez-Casares, Mt, Gottardi, E, Hayden, C, Hayette, S, Hedblom, A, Ilea, A, Izzo, B, Jiménez-Velasco, A, Jurcek, T, Kairisto, V, Langabeer, Se, Lion, T, Meggyesi, N, Mešanović, S, Mihok, L, Mitterbauer-Hohendanner, G, Moeckel, S, Naumann, N, Nibourel, O, Oppliger Leibundgut, E, Panayiotidis, P, Podgornik, H, Pott, C, Rapado, I, Rose, Sj, Schäfer, V, Touloumenidou, T, Veigaard, C, Venniker-Punt, B, Venturi, C, Vigneri, P, Vorkinn, I, Wilkinson, E, Zadro, R, Zawada, M, Zizkova, H, Müller, Mc, Saussele, S, Ernst, T, Machova Polakova, K, Hochhaus, A, Cross NCPa, 62, Andreas Hochhaus, 52, and Nicholas C, P Cross
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Cancer Research ,Cancer och onkologi ,Fatigue Syndrome, Chronic ,Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl ,610 Medicine & health ,Hematology ,Reference Standards ,Treatment Outcome ,Oncology ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive ,Cancer and Oncology ,Humans ,Hematologi - Abstract
Standardized monitoring of BCR::ABL1 mRNA levels is essential for the management of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients. From 2016 to 2021 the European Treatment and Outcome Study for CML (EUTOS) explored the use of secondary, lyophilized cell-based BCR::ABL1 reference panels traceable to the World Health Organization primary reference material to standardize and validate local laboratory tests. Panels were used to assign and validate conversion factors (CFs) to the International Scale and assess the ability of laboratories to assess deep molecular response (DMR). The study also explored aspects of internal quality control. The percentage of EUTOS reference laboratories (n = 50) with CFs validated as optimal or satisfactory increased from 67.5% to 97.6% and 36.4% to 91.7% for ABL1 and GUSB, respectively, during the study period and 98% of laboratories were able to detect MR4.5 in most samples. Laboratories with unvalidated CFs had a higher coefficient of variation for BCR::ABL1IS and some laboratories had a limit of blank greater than zero which could affect the accurate reporting of DMR. Our study indicates that secondary reference panels can be used effectively to obtain and validate CFs in a manner equivalent to sample exchange and can also be used to monitor additional aspects of quality assurance.
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- 2022
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4. Correction: Standardisation and consensus guidelines for minimal residual disease assessment in Philadelphia-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph+ALL) by real-time quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR of e1a2 BCR-ABL1 (Leukemia, (2019), 33, 8, (1910-1922), 10.1038/s41375-019-0413-0)
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Pfeifer H., Pfeifer, H, Cazzaniga, G, van der Velden, V, Cayuela, J, Schafer, B, Spinelli, O, Akiki, S, Avigad, S, Bendit, I, Borg, K, Cave, H, Elia, L, Reshmi, S, Gerrard, G, Hayette, S, Hermanson, M, Juh, A, Jurcek, T, Chillon, M, Homburg, C, Martinelli, G, Kairisto, V, Lange, T, Lion, T, Mueller, M, Pane, F, Rai, L, Damm-Welk, C, Sacha, T, Schnittger, S, Touloumenidou, T, Valerhaugen, H, Vandenberghe, P, Zuna, J, Serve, H, Herrmann, E, Markovic, S, van Dongen, J, Ottmann, O, Pfeifer H., Cazzaniga G., van der Velden V. H. J., Cayuela J. M., Schafer B., Spinelli O., Akiki S., Avigad S., Bendit I., Borg K., Cave H., Elia L., Reshmi S. C., Gerrard G., Hayette S., Hermanson M., Juh A., Jurcek T., Chillon M. C., Homburg C., Martinelli G., Kairisto V., Lange T., Lion T., Mueller M. C., Pane F., Rai L., Damm-Welk C., Sacha T., Schnittger S., Touloumenidou T., Valerhaugen H., Vandenberghe P., Zuna J., Serve H., Herrmann E., Markovic S., van Dongen J. J. M., Ottmann O. G., Pfeifer H., Pfeifer, H, Cazzaniga, G, van der Velden, V, Cayuela, J, Schafer, B, Spinelli, O, Akiki, S, Avigad, S, Bendit, I, Borg, K, Cave, H, Elia, L, Reshmi, S, Gerrard, G, Hayette, S, Hermanson, M, Juh, A, Jurcek, T, Chillon, M, Homburg, C, Martinelli, G, Kairisto, V, Lange, T, Lion, T, Mueller, M, Pane, F, Rai, L, Damm-Welk, C, Sacha, T, Schnittger, S, Touloumenidou, T, Valerhaugen, H, Vandenberghe, P, Zuna, J, Serve, H, Herrmann, E, Markovic, S, van Dongen, J, Ottmann, O, Pfeifer H., Cazzaniga G., van der Velden V. H. J., Cayuela J. M., Schafer B., Spinelli O., Akiki S., Avigad S., Bendit I., Borg K., Cave H., Elia L., Reshmi S. C., Gerrard G., Hayette S., Hermanson M., Juh A., Jurcek T., Chillon M. C., Homburg C., Martinelli G., Kairisto V., Lange T., Lion T., Mueller M. C., Pane F., Rai L., Damm-Welk C., Sacha T., Schnittger S., Touloumenidou T., Valerhaugen H., Vandenberghe P., Zuna J., Serve H., Herrmann E., Markovic S., van Dongen J. J. M., and Ottmann O. G.
- Abstract
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
- Published
- 2020
5. Standardisation and consensus guidelines for minimal residual disease assessment in Philadelphia-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph + ALL) by real-time quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR of e1a2 BCR-ABL1
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Pfeifer, H, Cazzaniga, G, van der Velden, V, Cayuela, J, Schäfer, B, Spinelli, O, Akiki, S, Avigad, S, Bendit, I, Borg, K, Cavé, H, Elia, L, Reshmi, S, Gerrard, G, Hayette, S, Hermanson, M, Juh, A, Jurcek, T, Chillón, M, Homburg, C, Martinelli, G, Kairisto, V, Lange, T, Lion, T, Mueller, M, Pane, F, Rai, L, Damm-Welk, C, Sacha, T, Schnittger, S, Touloumenidou, T, Valerhaugen, H, Vandenberghe, P, Zuna, J, Serve, H, Herrmann, E, Markovic, S, Dongen, J, Ottmann, O, Pfeifer, H., Cazzaniga, G., van der Velden, V. H. J., Cayuela, J. M., Schäfer, B., Spinelli, O., Akiki, S., Avigad, S., Bendit, I., Borg, K., Cavé, H., Elia, L., Reshmi, S. C., Gerrard, G., Hayette, S., Hermanson, M., Juh, A., Jurcek, T., Chillón, M. C., Homburg, C., Martinelli, G., Kairisto, V., Lange, T., Lion, T., Mueller, M. C., Pane, F., Rai, L., Damm-Welk, C., Sacha, T., Schnittger, S., Touloumenidou, T., Valerhaugen, H., Vandenberghe, P., Zuna, J., Serve, H., Herrmann, E., Markovic, S., Dongen, J. J. M. van, Ottmann, O. G., Pfeifer, H, Cazzaniga, G, van der Velden, V, Cayuela, J, Schäfer, B, Spinelli, O, Akiki, S, Avigad, S, Bendit, I, Borg, K, Cavé, H, Elia, L, Reshmi, S, Gerrard, G, Hayette, S, Hermanson, M, Juh, A, Jurcek, T, Chillón, M, Homburg, C, Martinelli, G, Kairisto, V, Lange, T, Lion, T, Mueller, M, Pane, F, Rai, L, Damm-Welk, C, Sacha, T, Schnittger, S, Touloumenidou, T, Valerhaugen, H, Vandenberghe, P, Zuna, J, Serve, H, Herrmann, E, Markovic, S, Dongen, J, Ottmann, O, Pfeifer, H., Cazzaniga, G., van der Velden, V. H. J., Cayuela, J. M., Schäfer, B., Spinelli, O., Akiki, S., Avigad, S., Bendit, I., Borg, K., Cavé, H., Elia, L., Reshmi, S. C., Gerrard, G., Hayette, S., Hermanson, M., Juh, A., Jurcek, T., Chillón, M. C., Homburg, C., Martinelli, G., Kairisto, V., Lange, T., Lion, T., Mueller, M. C., Pane, F., Rai, L., Damm-Welk, C., Sacha, T., Schnittger, S., Touloumenidou, T., Valerhaugen, H., Vandenberghe, P., Zuna, J., Serve, H., Herrmann, E., Markovic, S., Dongen, J. J. M. van, and Ottmann, O. G.
- Abstract
Minimal residual disease (MRD) is a powerful prognostic factor in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and is used for patient stratification and treatment decisions, but its precise role in Philadelphia chromosome positive ALL is less clear. This uncertainty results largely from methodological differences relating to the use of real-time quantitative PCR (qRT-PCR) to measure BCR-ABL1 transcript levels for MRD analysis. We here describe the first results by the EURO-MRD consortium on standardization of qRT-PCR for the e1a2 BCR-ABL1 transcript in Ph + ALL, designed to overcome the lack of standardisation of laboratory procedures and data interpretation. Standardised use of EAC primer/probe sets and of centrally prepared plasmid standards had the greatest impact on reducing interlaboratory variability. In QC1 the proportion of analyses with BCR-ABL1/ABL1 ratios within half a log difference were 40/67 (60%) and 52/67 (78%) at 10 −3 and 36/67 (53%) and 53/67 (79%) at 10 −4 BCR-ABL1/ABL1. Standardized RNA extraction, cDNA synthesis and cycler platforms did not improve results further, whereas stringent application of technical criteria for assay quality and uniform criteria for data interpretation and reporting were essential. We provide detailed laboratory recommendations for the standardized MRD analysis in routine diagnostic settings and in multicenter clinical trials for Ph + ALL.
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- 2019
6. A certified plasmid reference material for the standardisation of BCR-ABL1 mRNA quantification by real-time quantitative PCR
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White, H, Deprez, L, Corbisier, P, Hall, V, Lin, F, Mazoua, S, Trapmann, S, Aggerholm, A, Andrikovics, H, Akiki, S, Barbany, G, Boeckx, N, Bench, A, Catherwood, M, Cayuela, J-M, Chudleigh, S, Clench, T, Colomer, D, Daraio, F, Dulucq, S, Farrugia, J, Fletcher, L, Foroni, L, Ganderton, R, Gerrard, G, Gineikiene, E, Hayette, S, El Housni, H, Izzo, B, Jansson, M, Johnels, P, Jurcek, T, Kairisto, V, Kizilors, A, Kim, D-W, Lange, T, Lion, T, Polakova, K M, Martinelli, G, McCarron, S, Merle, P A, Milner, B, Mitterbauer-Hohendanner, G, Nagar, M, Nickless, G, Nomdedéu, J, Nymoen, D A, Leibundgut, E O, Ozbek, U, Pajic, T, Pfeifer, H, Preudhomme, C, Raudsepp, K, Romeo, G, Sacha, T, Talmaci, R, Touloumenidou, T, Van der Velden, V HJ, Waits, P, Wang, L, Wilkinson, E, Wilson, G, Wren, D, Zadro, R, Ziermann, J, Zoi, K, Müller, M C, Hochhaus, A, Schimmel, H, Cross, N CP, and Emons, H
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- 2015
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7. Standardisation and consensus guidelines for minimal residual disease assessment in Philadelphia-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph+ALL) by real-time quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR of e1a2 BCR-ABL1 (vol 32, pg 345, 2019)
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Pfeifer, H., Cazzaniga, G., Velden, V.H.J. van der, Cayuela, J.M., Schafer, B., Spinelli, O., Akiki, S., Avigad, S., Bendit, I., Borg, K., Cave, H., Elia, L., Reshmi, S.C., Gerrard, G., Hayette, S., Hermanson, M., Juh, A., Jurcek, T., Chillon, M.C., Homburg, C., Martinelli, G., Kairisto, V., Lange, T., Lion, T., Mueller, M.C., Pane, F., Rai, L., Damm-Welk, C., Sacha, T., Schnittger, S., Touloumenidou, T., Valerhaugen, H., Vandenberghe, P., Zuna, J., Serve, H., Herrmann, E., Markovic, S., Dongen, J.J.M. van, and Ottmann, O.G.
- Abstract
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
- Published
- 2020
8. Standardisation and consensus guidelines for minimal residual disease assessment in Philadelphia-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph plus ALL) by real-time quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR of e1a2 BCR-ABL1
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Pfeifer, H., Cazzaniga, G., van der Velden, V. H. J., Cayuele, J. M., Schafer, B., Spinelli, O., Akiki, S., Avigad, S., Bendit, I, Borg, K., Cave, H., Elia, L., Reshmi, S. C., Gerrard, G., Hayette, S., Hermansson, Monica, Juh, A., Jurcek, T., Chillon, M. C., Homburg, C., Martinelli, G., Kairisto, V, Langen, T., Lion, T., Mueller, M. C., Pane, F., Rai, L., Damm-Welk, C., Sacha, T., Schnittger, S., Touloumenidou, T., Valerhaugen, H., Vandenberghe, P., Zuna, J., Server, H., Herrmann, E., Markovic, S., van Dongen, J. J. M., Ottmann, O. G., Pfeifer, H., Cazzaniga, G., van der Velden, V. H. J., Cayuele, J. M., Schafer, B., Spinelli, O., Akiki, S., Avigad, S., Bendit, I, Borg, K., Cave, H., Elia, L., Reshmi, S. C., Gerrard, G., Hayette, S., Hermansson, Monica, Juh, A., Jurcek, T., Chillon, M. C., Homburg, C., Martinelli, G., Kairisto, V, Langen, T., Lion, T., Mueller, M. C., Pane, F., Rai, L., Damm-Welk, C., Sacha, T., Schnittger, S., Touloumenidou, T., Valerhaugen, H., Vandenberghe, P., Zuna, J., Server, H., Herrmann, E., Markovic, S., van Dongen, J. J. M., and Ottmann, O. G.
- Abstract
Minimal residual disease (MRD) is a powerful prognostic factor in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and is used for patient stratification and treatment decisions, but its precise role in Philadelphia chromosome positive ALL is less clear. This uncertainty results largely from methodological differences relating to the use of real-time quantitative PCR (qRT-PCR) to measure BCR-ABL1 transcript levels for MRD analysis. We here describe the first results by the EURO-MRD consortium on standardization of qRT-PCR for the e1a2 BCR-ABL1 transcript in Ph + ALL, designed to overcome the lack of standardisation of laboratory procedures and data interpretation. Standardised use of EAC primer/probe sets and of centrally prepared plasmid standards had the greatest impact on reducing interlaboratory variability. In QC1 the proportion of analyses with BCR-ABL1/ABL1 ratios within half a log difference were 40/67 (60%) and 52/67 (78%) at 10(-3) and 36/67 (53%) and 53/67 (79%) at 10(-4)BCR-ABL1/ABL1. Standardized RNA extraction, cDNA synthesis and cycler platforms did not improve results further, whereas stringent application of technical criteria for assay quality and uniform criteria for data interpretation and reporting were essential. We provide detailed laboratory recommendations for the standardized MRD analysis in routine diagnostic settings and in multicenter clinical trials for Ph + ALL.
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- 2019
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9. PF414 DNA-BASED BCR-ABL1 ANALYSIS PROVIDES A “TRAFFIC LIGHT” STRATIFICATION MODEL FOR CHRONIC MYELOID LEUKEMIA WITH IMPLICATIONS FOR TREATMENT FREE REMISSION
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Machova Polakova, K., primary, Zizkova, H., additional, Zuna, J., additional, Motlova, E., additional, Hovorkova, L., additional, Pecherkova, P., additional, Klamova, H., additional, Stastna Markova, M., additional, Srbova, D., additional, Koblihova, J., additional, Benesova, A., additional, Polivkova, V., additional, Jurcek, T., additional, Zackova, D., additional, Mayer, J., additional, Ernst, T., additional, Mahon, F.X., additional, Saussele, S., additional, Cross, N.C., additional, and Hochhaus, A., additional
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- 2019
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10. Development and evaluation of a secondary reference panel for BCR-ABL1 quantification on the International Scale
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Cross, N.C.P. White, H.E. Ernst, T. Welden, L. Dietz, C. Saglio, G. Mahon, F.-X. Wong, C.C. Zheng, D. Wong, S. Wang, S.-S. Akiki, S. Albano, F. Andrikovics, H. Anwar, J. Balatzenko, G. Bendit, I. Beveridge, J. Boeckx, N. Cerveira, N. Cheng, S.-M. Colomer, D. Czurda, S. Daraio, F. Dulucq, S. Eggen, L. El Housni, H. Gerrard, G. Gniot, M. Izzo, B. Jacquin, D. Janssen, J.J.W.M. Jeromin, S. Jurcek, T. Kim, D.-W. Machova-Polakova, K. Martinez-Lopez, J. McBean, M. Mesanovic, S. Mitterbauer-Hohendanner, G. Mobtaker, H. Mozziconacci, M.-J. Pajič, T. Pallisgaard, N. Panagiotidis, P. Press, R.D. Qin, Y.-Z. Radich, J. Sacha, T. Touloumenidou, T. Waits, P. Wilkinson, E. Zadro, R. Müller, M.C. Hochhaus, A. Branford, S.
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hemic and lymphatic diseases - Abstract
Molecular monitoring of chronic myeloid leukemia patients using robust BCR-ABL1 tests standardized to the International Scale (IS) is key to proper disease management, especially when treatment cessation is considered. Most laboratories currently use a time-consuming sample exchange process with reference laboratories for IS calibration. A World Health Organization (WHO) BCR-ABL1 reference panel was developed (MR 1 -MR 4), but access to the material is limited. In this study, we describe the development of the first cell-based secondary reference panel that is traceable to and faithfully replicates the WHO panel, with an additional MR 4.5 level. The secondary panel was calibrated to IS using digital PCR with ABL1, BCR and GUSB as reference genes and evaluated by 44 laboratories worldwide. Interestingly, we found that >40% of BCR-ABL1 assays showed signs of inadequate optimization such as poor linearity and suboptimal PCR efficiency. Nonetheless, when optimized sample inputs were used, >60% demonstrated satisfactory IS accuracy, precision and/or MR 4.5 sensitivity, and 58% obtained IS conversion factors from the secondary reference concordant with their current values. Correlation analysis indicated no significant alterations in %BCR-ABL1 results caused by different assay configurations. More assays achieved good precision and/or sensitivity than IS accuracy, indicating the need for better IS calibration mechanisms. © 2016 Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature.
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- 2016
11. Development and evaluation of a secondary reference panel for BCR-ABL1 quantification on the International Scale
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Cross, N C P, primary, White, H E, additional, Ernst, T, additional, Welden, L, additional, Dietz, C, additional, Saglio, G, additional, Mahon, F-X, additional, Wong, C C, additional, Zheng, D, additional, Wong, S, additional, Wang, S-S, additional, Akiki, S, additional, Albano, F, additional, Andrikovics, H, additional, Anwar, J, additional, Balatzenko, G, additional, Bendit, I, additional, Beveridge, J, additional, Boeckx, N, additional, Cerveira, N, additional, Cheng, S-M, additional, Colomer, D, additional, Czurda, S, additional, Daraio, F, additional, Dulucq, S, additional, Eggen, L, additional, El Housni, H, additional, Gerrard, G, additional, Gniot, M, additional, Izzo, B, additional, Jacquin, D, additional, Janssen, J J W M, additional, Jeromin, S, additional, Jurcek, T, additional, Kim, D-W, additional, Machova-Polakova, K, additional, Martinez-Lopez, J, additional, McBean, M, additional, Mesanovic, S, additional, Mitterbauer-Hohendanner, G, additional, Mobtaker, H, additional, Mozziconacci, M-J, additional, Pajič, T, additional, Pallisgaard, N, additional, Panagiotidis, P, additional, Press, R D, additional, Qin, Y-Z, additional, Radich, J, additional, Sacha, T, additional, Touloumenidou, T, additional, Waits, P, additional, Wilkinson, E, additional, Zadro, R, additional, Müller, M C, additional, Hochhaus, A, additional, and Branford, S, additional
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- 2016
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12. A certified plasmid reference material for the standardisation of BCR-ABL1 mRNA quantification by real-time quantitative PCR
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White, H., Deprez, L., Corbisier, P., Hall, V., Lin, F., Mazoua, S., Trapmann, S., Aggerholm, A., Andrikovics, H., Akiki, S., Barbany, G., Boeckx, N., Bench, A., Catherwood, M., Cayuela, J-M, Chudleigh, S., Clench, T., Colomer, D., Daraio, F., Dulucq, S., Farrugia, J., Fletcher, L., Foroni, L., Ganderton, R., Gerrard, G., Gineikiene, E., Hayette, S., El Housni, H., Izzo, B., Jansson, Mattias, Johnels, P., Jurcek, T., Kairisto, V., Kizilors, A., Kim, D-W, Lange, T., Lion, T., Polakova, K. M., Martinelli, G., McCarron, S., Merle, P. A., Milner, B., Mitterbauer-Hohendanner, G., Nagar, M., Nickless, G., Nomdedeu, J., Nymoen, D. A., Leibundgut, E. O., Ozbek, U., Pajic, T., Pfeifer, H., Preudhomme, C., Raudsepp, K., Romeo, G., Sacha, T., Talmaci, R., Touloumenidou, T., Van der Velden, V. H. J., Waits, P., Wang, L., Wilkinson, E., Wilson, G., Wren, D., Zadro, R., Ziermann, J., Zoi, K., Mueller, M. C., Hochhaus, A., Schimmel, H., Cross, N. C. P., Emons, H., White, H., Deprez, L., Corbisier, P., Hall, V., Lin, F., Mazoua, S., Trapmann, S., Aggerholm, A., Andrikovics, H., Akiki, S., Barbany, G., Boeckx, N., Bench, A., Catherwood, M., Cayuela, J-M, Chudleigh, S., Clench, T., Colomer, D., Daraio, F., Dulucq, S., Farrugia, J., Fletcher, L., Foroni, L., Ganderton, R., Gerrard, G., Gineikiene, E., Hayette, S., El Housni, H., Izzo, B., Jansson, Mattias, Johnels, P., Jurcek, T., Kairisto, V., Kizilors, A., Kim, D-W, Lange, T., Lion, T., Polakova, K. M., Martinelli, G., McCarron, S., Merle, P. A., Milner, B., Mitterbauer-Hohendanner, G., Nagar, M., Nickless, G., Nomdedeu, J., Nymoen, D. A., Leibundgut, E. O., Ozbek, U., Pajic, T., Pfeifer, H., Preudhomme, C., Raudsepp, K., Romeo, G., Sacha, T., Talmaci, R., Touloumenidou, T., Van der Velden, V. H. J., Waits, P., Wang, L., Wilkinson, E., Wilson, G., Wren, D., Zadro, R., Ziermann, J., Zoi, K., Mueller, M. C., Hochhaus, A., Schimmel, H., Cross, N. C. P., and Emons, H.
- Abstract
Serial quantification of BCR-ABL1 mRNA is an important therapeutic indicator in chronic myeloid leukaemia, but there is a substantial variation in results reported by different laboratories. To improve comparability, an internationally accepted plasmid certified reference material (CRM) was developed according to ISO Guide 34:2009. Fragments of BCR-ABL1 (e14a2 mRNA fusion), BCR and GUSB transcripts were amplified and cloned into pUC18 to yield plasmid pIRMM0099. Six different linearised plasmid solutions were produced with the following copy number concentrations, assigned by digital PCR, and expanded uncertainties: 1.08 +/- 0.13 x 10(6), 1.08 +/- 0.11 x 10(5), 1.03 +/- 0.10 x 10(4), 1.02 +/- 0.09 x 10(3), 1.04 +/- 0.10 x 10(2) and 10.0 +/- 1.5 copies/mu l. The certification of the material for the number of specific DNA fragments per plasmid, copy number concentration of the plasmid solutions and the assessment of inter-unit heterogeneity and stability were performed according to ISO Guide 35:2006. Two suitability studies performed by 63 BCR-ABL1 testing laboratories demonstrated that this set of 6 plasmid CRMs can help to standardise a number of measured transcripts of e14a2 BCR-ABL1 and three control genes (ABL1, BCR and GUSB). The set of six plasmid CRMs is distributed worldwide by the Institute for Reference Materials and Measurements (Belgium) and its authorised distributors (https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/en/reference-materials/catalogue/;CRM code ERM-AD623a-f).
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- 2015
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13. A certified plasmid reference material for the standardisation of BCR–ABL1 mRNA quantification by real-time quantitative PCR
- Author
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White, H, primary, Deprez, L, additional, Corbisier, P, additional, Hall, V, additional, Lin, F, additional, Mazoua, S, additional, Trapmann, S, additional, Aggerholm, A, additional, Andrikovics, H, additional, Akiki, S, additional, Barbany, G, additional, Boeckx, N, additional, Bench, A, additional, Catherwood, M, additional, Cayuela, J-M, additional, Chudleigh, S, additional, Clench, T, additional, Colomer, D, additional, Daraio, F, additional, Dulucq, S, additional, Farrugia, J, additional, Fletcher, L, additional, Foroni, L, additional, Ganderton, R, additional, Gerrard, G, additional, Gineikienė, E, additional, Hayette, S, additional, El Housni, H, additional, Izzo, B, additional, Jansson, M, additional, Johnels, P, additional, Jurcek, T, additional, Kairisto, V, additional, Kizilors, A, additional, Kim, D-W, additional, Lange, T, additional, Lion, T, additional, Polakova, K M, additional, Martinelli, G, additional, McCarron, S, additional, Merle, P A, additional, Milner, B, additional, Mitterbauer-Hohendanner, G, additional, Nagar, M, additional, Nickless, G, additional, Nomdedéu, J, additional, Nymoen, D A, additional, Leibundgut, E O, additional, Ozbek, U, additional, Pajič, T, additional, Pfeifer, H, additional, Preudhomme, C, additional, Raudsepp, K, additional, Romeo, G, additional, Sacha, T, additional, Talmaci, R, additional, Touloumenidou, T, additional, Van der Velden, V H J, additional, Waits, P, additional, Wang, L, additional, Wilkinson, E, additional, Wilson, G, additional, Wren, D, additional, Zadro, R, additional, Ziermann, J, additional, Zoi, K, additional, Müller, M C, additional, Hochhaus, A, additional, Schimmel, H, additional, Cross, N C P, additional, and Emons, H, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. A certified plasmid reference material for the standardisation of BCR-ABL1 mRNA quantification by real-time quantitative PCR
- Author
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Van Der Velden, V H J, Cayuela, J-M, McCarron, S, Sacha, T, Fletcher, L, Ziermann, J, Müller, M C, Schimmel, H, El Housni, H, White, H, Farrugia, J, Boeckx, N, Romeo, G, Johnels, P, Zoi, K, Chudleigh, S, Lion, T, Kairisto, V, Deprez, L, Ganderton, R, Merle, P A, Dulucq, S, Pajič, T, Gerrard, G, Martinelli, G, Trapmann, S, Hall, V, Nagar, M, Colomer, D, Hochhaus, A, Kizilors, A, Mitterbauer-Hohendanner, G, Talmaci, R, Gineikienė, E, Oppliger Leibundgut, Elisabeth, Mazoua, S, Cross, N C P, Milner, B, Zadro, R, Lin, F, Foroni, L, Waits, P, Kim, D-W, Nickless, G, Jansson, M, Pfeifer, H, Wilson, G, Raudsepp, K, Clench, T, Daraio, F, Preudhomme, C, Wang, L, Emons, H, Bench, A, Nomdedéu, J, Wilkinson, E, Hayette, S, Jurcek, T, Aggerholm, A, Izzo, B, Lange, T, Akiki, S, Andrikovics, H, Polakova, K M, Corbisier, P, Ozbek, U, Nymoen, D A, Wren, D, Barbany, G, Catherwood, M, and Touloumenidou, T
- Subjects
hemic and lymphatic diseases ,610 Medicine & health ,3. Good health - Abstract
Serial quantification of BCR-ABL1 mRNA is an important therapeutic indicator in chronic myeloid leukaemia, but there is a substantial variation in results reported by different laboratories. To improve comparability, an internationally accepted plasmid certified reference material (CRM) was developed according to ISO Guide 34:2009. Fragments of BCR-ABL1 (e14a2 mRNA fusion), BCR and GUSB transcripts were amplified and cloned into pUC18 to yield plasmid pIRMM0099. Six different linearised plasmid solutions were produced with the following copy number concentrations, assigned by digital PCR, and expanded uncertainties: 1.08±0.13 × 10(6), 1.08±0.11 × 10(5), 1.03±0.10 × 10(4), 1.02±0.09 × 10(3), 1.04±0.10 × 10(2) and 10.0±1.5 copies/μl. The certification of the material for the number of specific DNA fragments per plasmid, copy number concentration of the plasmid solutions and the assessment of inter-unit heterogeneity and stability were performed according to ISO Guide 35:2006. Two suitability studies performed by 63 BCR-ABL1 testing laboratories demonstrated that this set of 6 plasmid CRMs can help to standardise a number of measured transcripts of e14a2 BCR-ABL1 and three control genes (ABL1, BCR and GUSB). The set of six plasmid CRMs is distributed worldwide by the Institute for Reference Materials and Measurements (Belgium) and its authorised distributors (https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/en/reference-materials/catalogue/; CRM code ERM-AD623a-f).
15. Impact of BCR::ABL1 transcript type on RT-qPCR amplification performance and molecular response to therapy
- Author
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Matthew Salmon, Helen E. White, Hana Zizkova, Andrea Gottschalk, Eliska Motlova, Nuno Cerveira, Dolors Colomer, Daniel Coriu, Georg N. Franke, Enrico Gottardi, Barbara Izzo, Tomas Jurcek, Thomas Lion, Vivien Schäfer, Claudia Venturi, Paolo Vigneri, Magdalena Zawada, Jan Zuna, Lenka Hovorkova, Jitka Koblihova, Hana Klamova, Marketa Stastna Markova, Dana Srbova, Adela Benesova, Vaclava Polivkova, Daniela Zackova, Jiri Mayer, Ingo Roeder, Ingmar Glauche, Thomas Ernst, Andreas Hochhaus, Katerina Machova Polakova, Nicholas C. P. Cross, Salmon, M, White, He, Zizkova, H, Gottschalk, A, Motlova, E, Cerveira, N, Colomer, D, Coriu, D, Franke, Gn, Gottardi, E, Izzo, B, Jurcek, T, Lion, T, Schäfer, V, Venturi, C, Vigneri, P, Zawada, M, Zuna, J, Hovorkova, L, Koblihova, J, Klamova, H, Markova, M, Srbova, D, Benesova, A, Polivkova, V, Zackova, D, Mayer, J, Roeder, I, Glauche, I, Ernst, T, Hochhaus, A, Polakova, Km, and Cross, Ncp
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Neoplasm, Residual ,Oncology ,Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl ,Imatinib Mesylate ,Humans ,Hematology ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction - Abstract
Several studies have reported that chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) patients expressing e14a2 BCR::ABL1 have a faster molecular response to therapy compared to patients expressing e13a2. To explore the reason for this difference we undertook a detailed technical comparison of the commonly used Europe Against Cancer (EAC) BCR::ABL1 reverse transcriptase quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) assay in European Treatment and Outcome Study (EUTOS) reference laboratories (n = 10). We found the amplification ratio of the e13a2 amplicon was 38% greater than e14a2 (p = 0.015), and the amplification efficiency was 2% greater (P = 0.17). This subtle difference led to measurable transcript-type dependent variation in estimates of residual disease which could be corrected by (i) taking the qPCR amplification efficiency into account, (ii) using alternative RT-qPCR approaches or (iii) droplet digital PCR (ddPCR), a technique which is relatively insensitive to differences in amplification kinetics. In CML patients, higher levels of BCR::ABL1/GUSB were identified at diagnosis for patients expressing e13a2 (n = 67) compared to e14a2 (n = 78) when analysed by RT-qPCR (P = 0.0005) but not ddPCR (P = 0.5). These data indicate that widely used RT-qPCR assays result in subtly different estimates of disease depending on BCR::ABL1 transcript type; these differences are small but may need to be considered for optimal patient management.
- Published
- 2022
16. Development and evaluation of a secondary reference panel for BCR-ABL1 quantification on the International Scale
- Author
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T. Pajič, J. Anwar, J. Beveridge, T Touloumenidou, Dolors Colomer, P. Waits, Tomáš Jurček, S. Czurda, Andreas Hochhaus, L. Welden, Israel Bendit, M J Mozziconacci, Jeroen Janssen, Tomasz Sacha, Francesco Albano, Dong-Kee Kim, M. Gniot, Jerry Radich, D. Zheng, E. Wilkinson, L. Eggen, Christian Dietz, S. M. Cheng, K. Machova-Polakova, S. Wong, Martin C. Müller, Gareth Gerrard, Stéphanie Dulucq, Nuno Cerveira, H El Housni, Barbara Izzo, Francois-Xavier Mahon, Filomena Daraio, Helen E. White, G. Mitterbauer-Hohendanner, D. Jacquin, Susanna Akiki, G. Balatzenko, Renata Zadro, Susan Branford, Niels Pallisgaard, Nicholas C.P. Cross, Ya-Zhen Qin, S. Jeromin, H. Mobtaker, M. McBean, S. S. Wang, S. Mesanovic, Panagiotis Panagiotidis, Wong Connie C, Nancy Boeckx, Richard D. Press, Thomas Ernst, Hajnalka Andrikovics, Joaquin Martinez-Lopez, Giuseppe Saglio, Cross, NCP, White, HE, Ernst, T, Welden, L, Branford, Susan, Cancer Center Amsterdam, Hematology, CCA - Biomarkers, Cross, N. C. P, White, H. E, Dietz, C, Saglio, G, Mahon, F. X, Wong, C. C, Zheng, D, Wong, S, Wang, S. S, Akiki, S, Albano, F, Andrikovics, H, Anwar, J, Balatzenko, G, Bendit, I, Beveridge, J, Boeckx, N, Cerveira, N, Cheng, S. M, Colomer, D, Czurda, S, Daraio, F, Dulucq, S, Eggen, L, El Housni, H, Gerrard, G, Gniot, M, Izzo, Barbara, Jacquin, D, Janssen, J. J. W. M, Jeromin, S, Jurcek, T, Kim, D. W, Machova Polakova, K, Martinez Lopez, J, Mcbean, M, Mesanovic, S, Mitterbauer Hohendanner, G, Mobtaker, H, Mozziconacci, M. J, Pajič, T, Pallisgaard, N, Panagiotidis, P, Press, R. D, Qin, Y. Z, Radich, J, Sacha, T, Touloumenidou, T, Waits, P, Wilkinson, E, Zadro, R, Müller, M. C, Hochhaus, A, and Branford, S.
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,International scale ,bcr-abl ,Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl ,Genes, abl ,Bioinformatics ,World Health Organization ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,World health ,Anesthésiologie ,03 medical and health sciences ,Bcr abl1 ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reference genes ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Statistics ,Calibration ,Secondary reference ,Medicine ,Humans ,Digital polymerase chain reaction ,business.industry ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcr ,Reference Standards ,Hematology ,Oncology ,abl ,leukemia ,Fusion Proteins ,BCR-ABL1 tests ,Cancérologie ,030104 developmental biology ,Genes ,molecular monitoring ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Correlation analysis ,Original Article ,business ,Hématologie - Abstract
Molecular monitoring of chronic myeloid leukemia patients using robust BCR-ABL1 tests standardized to the International Scale (IS) is key to proper disease management, especially when treatment cessation is considered. Most laboratories currently use a time-consuming sample exchange process with reference laboratories for IS calibration. A World Health Organization (WHO) BCR-ABL1 reference panel was developed (MR 1 -MR 4), but access to the material is limited. In this study, we describe the development of the first cell-based secondary reference panel that is traceable to and faithfully replicates the WHO panel, with an additional MR 4.5 level. The secondary panel was calibrated to IS using digital PCR with ABL1, BCR and GUSB as reference genes and evaluated by 44 laboratories worldwide. Interestingly, we found that >40% of BCR-ABL1 assays showed signs of inadequate optimization such as poor linearity and suboptimal PCR efficiency. Nonetheless, when optimized sample inputs were used, >60% demonstrated satisfactory IS accuracy, precision and/or MR 4.5 sensitivity, and 58% obtained IS conversion factors from the secondary reference concordant with their current values. Correlation analysis indicated no significant alterations in %BCR-ABL1 results caused by different assay configurations. More assays achieved good precision and/or sensitivity than IS accuracy, indicating the need for better IS calibration mechanisms., 0, SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. A certified plasmid reference material for the standardisation of BCR-ABL1 mRNA quantification by real-time quantitative PCR
- Author
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J M Cayuela, BJ Milner, Stéphane Mazoua, Elisabeth Oppliger Leibundgut, Linda Fletcher, Heike Pfeifer, Tomáš Jurček, E Gineikienė, P. Waits, Susanna Akiki, G Wilson, J Farrugia, H El Housni, Ugur Ozbek, D Wren, F. Lin, Tomasz Sacha, Hajnalka Andrikovics, S Chudleigh, Letizia Foroni, Stefanie Trapmann, Petra Johnels, Gareth Gerrard, Thomas Lion, M. Jansson, Katerina Zoi, Hendrik Emons, K. Raudsepp, Gisela Barbany, D A Nymoen, H Schimmel, J Ziermann, Nancy Boeckx, Mark Catherwood, Sandrine Hayette, G Romeo, Helen E. White, R Ganderton, Filomena Daraio, G. Mitterbauer-Hohendanner, Philippe Corbisier, Claude Preudhomme, Andreas Hochhaus, Martin C. Müller, P A Merle, V H J van der Velden, M Nagar, Victoria J. Hall, Lihui Wang, Theis Lange, Tim Clench, T Pajič, Stéphanie Dulucq, D-W Kim, Nicholas C.P. Cross, Josep F. Nomdedeu, Rodica Talmaci, Kateřina Machová Poláková, A Bench, Liesbet Deprez, T Touloumenidou, G Nickless, Veli Kairisto, Barbara Izzo, Dolors Colomer, Aytug Kizilors, Giovanni Martinelli, Renata Zadro, Anni Aggerholm, S McCarron, E Wilkinson, Hematology, CCA - Disease profiling, White, H, Deprez, L, Corbisier, P, Hall, V, Lin, F, Mazoua, S, Trapmann, S, Aggerholm, A, Andrikovics, H, Akiki, S, Barbany, G, Boeckx, N, Bench, A, Catherwood, M, Cayuela, Jm, Chudleigh, S, Clench, T, Colomer, D, Daraio, F, Dulucq, S, Farrugia, J, Fletcher, L, Foroni, L, Ganderton, R, Gerrard, G, Gineikienė, E, Hayette, S, El Housni, H, Izzo, Barbara, Jansson, M, Johnels, P, Jurcek, T, Kairisto, V, Kizilors, A, Kim, Dw, Lange, T, Lion, T, Polakova, Km, Martinelli, G, Mccarron, S, Merle, Pa, Milner, B, Mitterbauer Hohendanner, G, Nagar, M, Nickless, G, Nomdedéu, J, Nymoen, Da, Leibundgut, Eo, Ozbek, U, Pajič, T, Pfeifer, H, Preudhomme, C, Raudsepp, K, Romeo, G, Sacha, T, Talmaci, R, Touloumenidou, T, Van der Velden, Vh, Waits, P, Wang, L, Wilkinson, E, Wilson, G, Wren, D, Zadro, R, Ziermann, J, Zoi, K, Müller, Mc, Hochhaus, A, Schimmel, H, Cross, Nc, Emons, H., Immunology, Radiology & Nuclear Medicine, Izzo, B, and Mitterbauer-Hohendanner, G
- Subjects
EMTREE drug terms: plasmid DNA EMTREE medical terms: Article ,Cancer Research ,Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl ,Gene Dosage ,Membrane Transport Protein ,Plasmid ,RECOMMENDATIONS ,real time quantitative polymerase chain reaction ,K562 cell line ,law.invention ,law ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Escherichia coli Protein ,CANCER PROGRAM ,Digital polymerase chain reaction ,Cloning, Molecular ,Polymerase chain reaction ,MOLECULAR RESPONSE ,Medicine (all) ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,copy number variation ,breakpoint cluster region ,gene control ,Hematology ,Reference Standards ,gusb gene ,3. Good health ,Real-time polymerase chain reaction ,Certified reference materials ,priority journal ,Oncology ,real time polymerase chain reaction ,Calibration ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcr ,Original Article ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Medical Genetics ,Plasmids ,EUROPE ,POLYMERASE-CHAIN-REACTION ,610 Medicine & health ,Biology ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,IMATINIB ,Gene dosage ,Anesthésiologie ,chronic myeloid leukemia ,TRANSCRIPTS ,TYROSINE KINASE INHIBITORS ,bcr abl gene ,Humans ,controlled study ,human ,ddc:610 ,RNA, Messenger ,CHRONIC MYELOID-LEUKEMIA ,gene ,certified plasmid reference material ,bcr-abl1 ,Medicinsk genetik ,freeze thawing ,Messenger RNA ,Science & Technology ,human cell ,reference value ,Membrane Transport Proteins ,HL 60 cell line ,DNA ,ta3122 ,Molecular biology ,Cancérologie ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,certified reference material ,minimal residual disease ,Reference Standard ,Hématologie - Abstract
Serial quantification of BCR-ABL1 mRNA is an important therapeutic indicator in chronic myeloid leukaemia, but there is a substantial variation in results reported by different laboratories. To improve comparability, an internationally accepted plasmid certified reference material (CRM) was developed according to ISO Guide 34:2009. Fragments of BCR-ABL1 (e14a2 mRNA fusion), BCR and GUSB transcripts were amplified and cloned into pUC18 to yield plasmid pIRMM0099. Six different linearised plasmid solutions were produced with the following copy number concentrations, assigned by digital PCR, and expanded uncertainties: 1.08±0.13 × 10 6, 1.08±0.11 × 10 5, 1.03±0.10 × 10 4, 1.02±0.09 × 10 3, 1.04±0.10 × 10 2 and 10.0±1.5 copies/μl. The certification of the material for the number of specific DNA fragments per plasmid, copy number concentration of the plasmid solutions and the assessment of inter-unit heterogeneity and stability were performed according to ISO Guide 35:2006. Two suitability studies performed by 63 BCR-ABL1 testing laboratories demonstrated that this set of 6 plasmid CRMs can help to standardise a number of measured transcripts of e14a2 BCR-ABL1 and three control genes (ABL1, BCR and GUSB). The set of six plasmid CRMs is distributed worldwide by the Institute for Reference Materials and Measurements (Belgium) and its authorised distributors (https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/en/reference-materials/catalogue/; CRM code ERM-AD623a-f)., 0, SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. De novo accelerated phase of chronic myeloid leukemia should be recognized even in the era of tyrosine kinase inhibitors.
- Author
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Hornak T, Mayer J, Cicatkova P, Semerad L, Kvetkova A, Klamova H, Faber E, Belohlavkova P, Karas M, Stejskal L, Cmunt E, Cerna O, Srbova D, Zizkova H, Vrablova L, Skoumalova I, Voglova J, Jurkova T, Chrapava M, Jurcek T, Jeziskova I, Jarosova M, Machova Polakova K, Papajik T, Zak P, Jindra P, and Zackova D
- Subjects
- Humans, Blast Crisis drug therapy, Protein Kinase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitors, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive drug therapy
- Abstract
Overall survival of patients classified according to the European LeukemiaNet 2020 classification. Chronic phase (CP), accelerated phase (AP), blast crisis (BC), low risk (LR), intermediate risk (IR), high risk (HR)., (© 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Impact of BCR::ABL1 transcript type on RT-qPCR amplification performance and molecular response to therapy.
- Author
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Salmon M, White HE, Zizkova H, Gottschalk A, Motlova E, Cerveira N, Colomer D, Coriu D, Franke GN, Gottardi E, Izzo B, Jurcek T, Lion T, Schäfer V, Venturi C, Vigneri P, Zawada M, Zuna J, Hovorkova L, Koblihova J, Klamova H, Markova MS, Srbova D, Benesova A, Polivkova V, Zackova D, Mayer J, Roeder I, Glauche I, Ernst T, Hochhaus A, Polakova KM, and Cross NCP
- Subjects
- Humans, Imatinib Mesylate, Neoplasm, Residual genetics, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl genetics, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive diagnosis, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive drug therapy, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive genetics
- Abstract
Several studies have reported that chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) patients expressing e14a2 BCR::ABL1 have a faster molecular response to therapy compared to patients expressing e13a2. To explore the reason for this difference we undertook a detailed technical comparison of the commonly used Europe Against Cancer (EAC) BCR::ABL1 reverse transcriptase quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) assay in European Treatment and Outcome Study (EUTOS) reference laboratories (n = 10). We found the amplification ratio of the e13a2 amplicon was 38% greater than e14a2 (p = 0.015), and the amplification efficiency was 2% greater (P = 0.17). This subtle difference led to measurable transcript-type dependent variation in estimates of residual disease which could be corrected by (i) taking the qPCR amplification efficiency into account, (ii) using alternative RT-qPCR approaches or (iii) droplet digital PCR (ddPCR), a technique which is relatively insensitive to differences in amplification kinetics. In CML patients, higher levels of BCR::ABL1/GUSB were identified at diagnosis for patients expressing e13a2 (n = 67) compared to e14a2 (n = 78) when analysed by RT-qPCR (P = 0.0005) but not ddPCR (P = 0.5). These data indicate that widely used RT-qPCR assays result in subtly different estimates of disease depending on BCR::ABL1 transcript type; these differences are small but may need to be considered for optimal patient management., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Hierarchical distribution of somatic variants in newly diagnosed chronic myeloid leukaemia at diagnosis and early follow-up.
- Author
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Romzova M, Smitalova D, Hynst J, Tom N, Loja T, Herudkova Z, Jurcek T, Stejskal L, Zackova D, Mayer J, Racil Z, and Culen M
- Subjects
- Follow-Up Studies, Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl genetics, Humans, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive diagnosis, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive therapy, Mutation, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive genetics
- Abstract
There is an emerging body of evidence that patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) may carry not only breakpoint cluster region-Abelson murine leukaemia viral oncogene homologue 1 (BCR-ABL1) kinase domain mutations (BCR-ABL1 KD mutations), but also mutations in other genes. Their occurrence is highest during progression or at failure, but their impact at diagnosis is unclear. In the present study, we prospectively screened for mutations in 18 myeloid neoplasm-associated genes and BCR-ABL1 KD in the following populations: bulk leucocytes, CD34
+ CD38+ progenitors and CD34+ CD38- stem cells, at diagnosis and early follow-up. In our cohort of chronic phase CML patients, nine of 49 patients harboured somatic mutations in the following genes: six ASXL1 mutations, one SETBP1, one TP53, one JAK2, but no BCR-ABL1 KD mutations. In seven of the nine patients, mutations were detected in multiple hierarchical populations including bulk leucocytes at diagnosis. The mutation dynamics reflected the BCR-ABL1 transcript decline induced by treatment in eight of the nine cases, suggesting that mutations were acquired in the Philadelphia chromosome (Ph)-positive clone. In one patient, the JAK2 V617F mutation correlated with a concomitant Ph-negative myeloproliferative neoplasm and persisted despite a 5-log reduction of the BCR-ABL1 transcript. Only two of the nine patients with mutations failed first-line therapy. No correlation was found between the mutation status and survival or response outcomes., (© 2021 British Society for Haematology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Evaluation of two CE-IVD tests for BCR-ABL1 transcript monitoring of chronic myeloid leukemia patients.
- Author
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Folta A, Jurcek T, Kubesova B, Zackova D, Semerad L, Mayer J, and Jeziskova I
- Subjects
- Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl genetics, Humans, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive diagnosis, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive genetics, Leukemia, Myeloid
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Analysis of chronic myeloid leukaemia during deep molecular response by genomic PCR: a traffic light stratification model with impact on treatment-free remission.
- Author
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Machova Polakova K, Zizkova H, Zuna J, Motlova E, Hovorkova L, Gottschalk A, Glauche I, Koblihova J, Pecherkova P, Klamova H, Stastna Markova M, Srbova D, Benesova A, Polivkova V, Jurcek T, Zackova D, Mayer J, Ernst T, Mahon FX, Saussele S, Roeder I, Cross NCP, and Hochhaus A
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive genetics, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive mortality, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm, Residual, RNA, Messenger analysis, Remission Induction, Withholding Treatment, Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl genetics, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive drug therapy, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Protein Kinase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Protein-Tyrosine Kinases antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
This work investigated patient-specific genomic BCR-ABL1 fusions as markers of measurable residual disease (MRD) in chronic myeloid leukaemia, with a focus on relevance to treatment-free remission (TFR) after achievement of deep molecular response (DMR) on tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy. DNA and mRNA BCR-ABL1 measurements by qPCR were compared in 2189 samples (129 patients) and by digital PCR in 1279 sample (62 patients). A high correlation was found at levels of disease above MR4, but there was a poor correlation for samples during DMR. A combination of DNA and RNA MRD measurements resulted in a better prediction of molecular relapse-free survival (MRFS) after TKI stop (n = 17) or scheduled interruption (n = 25). At 18 months after treatment cessation, patients with stopped or interrupted TKI therapy who were DNA negative/RNA negative during DMR maintenance (green group) had an MRFS of 80% and 100%, respectively, compared with those who were DNA positive/RNA negative (MRFS = 57% and 67%, respectively; yellow group) or DNA positive/RNA positive (MRFS = 20% for both cohorts; red group). Thus, we propose a "traffic light" stratification as a TFR predictor based on DNA and mRNA BCR-ABL1 measurements during DMR maintenance before TKI cessation.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Novel Illumina-based next generation sequencing approach with one-round amplification provides early and reliable detection of BCR-ABL1 kinase domain mutations in chronic myeloid leukemia.
- Author
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Romzova M, Smitalova D, Tom N, Jurcek T, Culen M, Zackova D, Mayer J, and Racil Z
- Subjects
- Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Mutation, Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl genetics, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing methods, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive genetics
- Abstract
The occurrence of mutations in the BCR-ABL1 kinase domain (KD) can lead to treatment resistance in chronic myeloid leukaemia patients. Nowadays, next-generation sequencing (NGS) is an alternative method for the detection of kinase domain mutations, compared to routinely used Sanger sequencing, providing a higher sensitivity of mutation detection. However, in the protocols established so far multiple rounds of amplification limit reliable mutation detection to approximately 5% variant allele frequency. Here, we present a simplified, one-round amplification NGS protocol for the Illumina platform, which offers a robust early detection of BCR-ABL1 KD mutations with a reliable detection limit of 3% variant allele frequency., (© 2020 British Society for Haematology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Results of the European survey on the assessment of deep molecular response in chronic phase CML patients during tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy (EUREKA registry).
- Author
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Möbius S, Schenk T, Himsel D, Maier J, Franke GN, Saussele S, Pott C, Andrikovics H, Meggyesi N, Machova-Polakova K, Zizkova H, Jurcek T, Mesanovic S, Zadro R, Gottardi E, Haenig J, Schuld P, Cross NCP, Hochhaus A, and Ernst T
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cohort Studies, Europe, Humans, Laboratories standards, Laboratories statistics & numerical data, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive blood, Leukemia, Myeloid, Chronic-Phase blood, Middle Aged, Registries, Young Adult, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive drug therapy, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive genetics, Leukemia, Myeloid, Chronic-Phase drug therapy, Leukemia, Myeloid, Chronic-Phase genetics, Protein Kinase Inhibitors administration & dosage
- Abstract
Purpose: The advent of tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapies has revolutionized the treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). The European LeukemiaNet (ELN) recommends quantification of BCR-ABL1 transcripts by real-time quantitative PCR every 3 months during TKI treatment. Since a proportion of patients in deep molecular response (DMR: MR
4 , MR4.5 , MR5 ) maintain remission after treatment stop, assessment of DMR is crucial. However, systematically collected molecular data, monitored with sensitive standardized assays, are not available outside clinical trials., Methods: Data were collected on the standardized assessment of molecular response in the context of real-life practice. BCR-ABL1 transcript levels after > 2 years of TKI therapy were evaluated for DMR by local laboratories as well as standardized EUTOS laboratories. Since standardized molecular monitoring is a prerequisite for treatment discontinuation, central surveillance of the performance of the participating laboratories was carried out., Results: Between 2014 and 2017, 3377 peripheral blood samples from 1117 CML patients were shipped to 11 standardized reference laboratories in six European countries. BCR-ABL1 transcript types were b3a2 (41.63%), b2a2 (29.99%), b2a2/b3a2 (3.58%) and atypical (0.54%). For 23.72% of the patients, the initial transcript type had not been reported. Response levels (EUTOS laboratory) were: no MMR, n = 197 (6.51%); MMR, n = 496 (16.40%); MR4 , n = 685 (22.64%); MR4.5 , n = 937 (30.98%); MR5 , n = 710 (23.47%). With a Cohen's kappa coefficient of 0.708, a substantial agreement between EUTOS-certified and local laboratories was shown., Conclusions: Multicenter DMR assessment is feasible in the context of real-life clinical practice in Europe. Information on the BCR-ABL1 transcript type at diagnosis is crucial to accurately monitor patients' molecular response during or after TKI therapy.- Published
- 2019
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25. Quantitative assessment of the CD26+ leukemic stem cell compartment in chronic myeloid leukemia: patient-subgroups, prognostic impact, and technical aspects.
- Author
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Culen M, Borsky M, Nemethova V, Razga F, Smejkal J, Jurcek T, Dvorakova D, Zackova D, Weinbergerova B, Semerad L, Sadovnik I, Eisenwort G, Herrmann H, Valent P, Mayer J, and Racil Z
- Subjects
- Dipeptidyl Peptidase 4 immunology, Humans, Immunophenotyping, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive immunology, Neoplastic Stem Cells pathology, Prognosis, Dipeptidyl Peptidase 4 biosynthesis, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive pathology, Neoplastic Stem Cells immunology
- Abstract
Little is known about the function and phenotype of leukemic stem cells (LSCs) in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) or about specific markers that discriminate LSCs from normal hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). CD26 has recently been described as a specific marker of CML LSCs. In the current study, we investigated this marker in a cohort of 31 unselected CML patients. BCR/ABL1 positivity was analyzed in highly enriched stem cell fractions using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR). The proportion of CD26+ LSCs and CD26- HSCs varied considerably among the patients analyzed, and the percentage of CD26+ cells correlated with leukocyte count. The CD26 expression robustly discriminated LSCs from HSCs. This required a strict gating of the stem cell compartment. Thus, in patients with very low LSC or HSC numbers, only the highly sensitive RT-PCR method discriminated between clonal and non-clonal cells, while a robust FISH analysis required larger numbers of cells in both compartments. Finally, our data show that the numbers of CD26+ CML LSCs correlate with responses to treatment with BCR-ABL1 inhibitors., Competing Interests: P.V. has received research funding and honoraria from BMS, Novartis and Ariad. The other authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose in this study.
- Published
- 2016
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26. BCR-ABL1 kinase domain mutational analysis of CD34+ stem/progenitor cells in newly diagnosed CML patients by next-generation sequencing.
- Author
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Musilova M, Razga F, Jurcek T, Jeziskova I, Borsky M, Nemethova V, Zackova D, Culen M, Dvorakova D, Mayer J, and Racil Z
- Subjects
- DNA Mutational Analysis methods, Female, Humans, Male, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Antigens, CD34, Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl genetics, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive genetics, Stem Cells
- Published
- 2014
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27. Prospective analysis of low-level BCR-ABL1 T315I mutation in CD34 + cells of patients with de novo chronic myeloid leukemia.
- Author
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Jurcek T, Razga F, Mazancova P, Musilova M, Dvorakova D, Borsky M, Zackova D, Dobesova B, Semerad L, Mayer J, and Racil Z
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Substitution, Codon, Humans, Prospective Studies, Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl genetics, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive genetics, Mutation
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
28. Efficacy and tolerance of dasatinib after imatinib failure or intolerance for patients with chronic myeloid leukemia treated in three different hospitals compare well with results achievable in formal clinical trials.
- Author
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Zackova D, Klamova H, Muzik J, Cmunt E, Racil Z, Machova Polakova K, Dvorakova D, Jurcek T, Razga F, Cetkovsky P, Dusek L, and Mayer J
- Subjects
- Dasatinib, Drug Substitution, Humans, Imatinib Mesylate, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive mortality, Treatment Failure, Treatment Outcome, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Benzamides therapeutic use, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive drug therapy, Piperazines therapeutic use, Protein-Tyrosine Kinases therapeutic use, Pyrimidines therapeutic use, Thiazoles therapeutic use
- Published
- 2013
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29. The BCR-ABL1 T315I mutation and additional genomic aberrations are dominant genetic lesions associated with disease progression in patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia resistant to tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy.
- Author
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Malcikova J, Razga F, Jurcek T, Dvorakova D, Zackova D, Toskova M, Sebejova L, Smardova J, Oltova A, Vankova G, Jurackova L, Trbusek M, Pospisilova S, Mayer J, and Racil Z
- Subjects
- Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Codon, Disease Progression, Humans, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive drug therapy, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive mortality, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive pathology, Protein Kinase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Chromosome Aberrations, Drug Resistance, Neoplasm genetics, Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl genetics, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive genetics, Mutation
- Published
- 2013
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- View/download PDF
30. Role of treatment in the appearance and selection of BCR-ABL1 kinase domain mutations.
- Author
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Razga F, Jurcek T, Zackova D, Dvorakova D, Toskova M, Jeziskova I, Mayer J, and Racil Z
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl genetics, Humans, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive genetics, Male, Middle Aged, Mutation, Protein-Tyrosine Kinases genetics, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive drug therapy, Protein Kinase Inhibitors therapeutic use
- Abstract
Background and Objective: The availability of different tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) with distinct anti-leukemic potency enables optimization of current therapeutic regimens; however, some patients lose their therapy response and acquire TKI resistance. In this study, we describe a single-center experience of monitoring BCR-ABL1 kinase domain (KD) mutations and discuss the impact of treatment on mutation selection., Methods: Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) patients treated with TKIs at the Department of Internal Medicine-Hematology and Oncology, Masaryk University and University Hospital Brno during 2003-2011 were included in this study. A total number of 100 patients who did not achieve an optimal therapy response or who lost their therapy response were screened for the presence of BCR-ABL1 KD mutations, using direct sequencing., Results: Our data show that pretreatment with non-specific non-TKI drugs prior to TKI therapy does not preferentially select for initial BCR-ABL1 KD mutations, in contrast to first-line imatinib therapy, which shows a clear predominance of T315I or P-loop mutations compared with mutations located in other KD regions. In addition, the median time to detection of P-loop mutations was substantially shorter in patients treated with first-line imatinib than in those pretreated with non-TKI drugs. Furthermore, analysis of CML patients who had recurrent resistance to TKI therapy revealed possible therapy-driven selection of BCR-ABL1 KD mutations. Finally, we confirm the previously described poor prognosis of CML patients with mutations in the BCR-ABL1 KD, since 40.0% of our CML patients who harbored a BCR-ABL1 KD mutation died from CML while receiving TKI treatment. Moreover, among the patients who are still on treatment, 27.8% have already progressed. Our data also confirm the unique position of the T315I mutation with respect to its strong resistance to currently approved TKIs., Conclusion: On the basis of the 'real-life' data described in this study, it is possible that the therapy itself results in its failure and selects the most resistant mutations under the selective pressure of the applied therapy regimen in some CML patients who harbor BCR-ABL1 KD mutations.
- Published
- 2012
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31. BCR-ABL activity measured by 50% inhibitory concentration for imatinib, p-CrkL/CrkL ratio or p-CrkL ratio in CD34+ cells of patients with chronic myeloid leukemia does not predict treatment response.
- Author
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Simara P, Peterkova M, Stejskal S, Potesilova M, Koutna I, Racil Z, Razga F, Jurcek T, Dvorakova D, and Mayer J
- Subjects
- Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Benzamides, Flow Cytometry methods, Humans, Imatinib Mesylate, Inhibitory Concentration 50, Models, Biological, Piperazines therapeutic use, Pyrimidines therapeutic use, Signal Transduction, Treatment Outcome, Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing biosynthesis, Antigens, CD34 biosynthesis, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl biosynthesis, Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Leukemic, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive genetics, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive metabolism, Nuclear Proteins biosynthesis
- Published
- 2012
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32. Analysis of mutations in the BCR-ABL1 kinase domain, using direct sequencing: detection of the T315I mutation in bone marrow CD34+ cells of a patient with chronic myelogenous leukemia 6 months prior to its emergence in peripheral blood.
- Author
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Razga F, Jurcek T, Jeziskova I, Zackova D, Dvorakova D, Borsky M, Mayer J, and Racil Z
- Subjects
- Aged, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Benzamides, Bone Marrow Cells cytology, Disease Progression, Humans, Hydroxyurea therapeutic use, Imatinib Mesylate, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive blood, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive drug therapy, Male, Mutation, Piperazines therapeutic use, Pyrimidines therapeutic use, Antigens, CD34 analysis, Bone Marrow Cells enzymology, Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl genetics, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive genetics, Protein-Tyrosine Kinases genetics
- Abstract
Background and Objective: It has been shown that the occurrence of the BCR-ABL1 T315I mutation leads to a very poor therapeutic outcome in chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) patients treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors. Therefore, early detection of this mutation could potentially lead to early therapeutic intervention and a better prognosis with the ongoing treatment regimen., Methods: The detection of BCR-ABL1 kinase domain (KD) mutations was performed by direct sequencing of peripheral blood (PB), total bone marrow (BM), and BM CD34+ cells from a reported CML patient., Results: In this patient, the T315I mutation was detected in BM CD34+ cells 6 months prior to its emergence in PB, suggesting evolution and expansion of the T315I mutation clone, which most likely originated from more primitive CML cells., Conclusion: Our finding reflects the natural development of a T315I mutation within the hematopoietic system of the reported patient and indicates the importance of BCR-ABL1 mutation monitoring in more primitive cell populations. Considering the natural history of T315I development in this reported CML case, we hypothesize that BCR-ABL1 KD mutations may be pre-concentrated in more primitive CML cells, which subsequently expand into the PB. These findings may have future implications for the strategy used for detecting BCR-ABL1 mutations.
- Published
- 2012
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33. Imatinib as the first-line treatment of patients with chronic myeloid leukemia diagnosed in the chronic phase: can we compare real life data to the results from clinical trials?
- Author
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Zackova D, Klamova H, Dusek L, Muzik J, Polakova KM, Moravcova J, Jurcek T, Dvorakova D, Racil Z, Pospisil Z, Oltova A, Michalova K, Brezinova J, Razga F, Doubek M, Cetkovsky P, Trneny M, and Mayer J
- Subjects
- Benzamides, Czech Republic, Data Collection, Drug Evaluation, Female, Humans, Imatinib Mesylate, Leukemia, Myeloid, Chronic-Phase mortality, Male, Treatment Outcome, Leukemia, Myeloid, Chronic-Phase drug therapy, Piperazines therapeutic use, Pyrimidines therapeutic use
- Published
- 2011
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34. The assessment of human organic cation transporter 1 (hOCT1) mRNA expression in patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia is affected by the proportion of different cells types in the analyzed cell population.
- Author
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Racil Z, Razga F, Buresova L, Jurcek T, Dvorakova D, Zackova D, Timilsina S, Cetkovsky P, and Mayer J
- Subjects
- Benzamides, Drug Monitoring standards, Humans, Imatinib Mesylate, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive drug therapy, Leukocyte Count, Leukocytes, Mononuclear, Neutrophils, Piperazines pharmacokinetics, Pyrimidines pharmacokinetics, RNA, Neoplasm analysis, Drug Monitoring methods, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive pathology, Leukocytes cytology, Organic Cation Transporter 1 genetics, Piperazines therapeutic use, Pyrimidines therapeutic use, RNA, Messenger analysis
- Published
- 2010
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35. A case of a novel PML/RARA short fusion transcript with truncated transcription variant 2 of the RARA gene.
- Author
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Jezísková I, Rázga F, Gazdová J, Doubek M, Jurcek T, Korístek Z, Mayer J, and Dvoráková D
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, Electrophoresis, Agar Gel, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Molecular Sequence Data, Protein Isoforms genetics, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Retinoic Acid Receptor alpha, Oncogene Proteins, Fusion genetics, Receptors, Retinoic Acid genetics, Transcription, Genetic
- Abstract
Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) with atypical breakpoints in the promyelocytic leukemia (PML) and retinoic acid receptor-alpha (RARA) genes represents a rare leukemic event, which occurs preferentially in patients with variant types of the PML/RARA fusion gene. Here we report on a patient with APL with a unique PML/RARA fusion transcript that harbors a short type of this fusion gene, exhibiting unexpected results of standard PCR diagnostics. The detected transcript originates from fusion of PML exon 4 and a truncated form of transcription variant 2 of the RARA gene, with an additional 9 bp insertion. According to our knowledge, this differs from all previously described fusion transcripts.
- Published
- 2010
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- View/download PDF
36. Failure of molecular diagnostics in chronic myeloid leukemia: an aberrant form of e13a2 BCR-ABL transcript causing false-negative results by standard polymerase chain reaction.
- Author
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Jurcek T, Razga F, Jeziskova I, Dvorakova D, Zackova D, Tomasikova L, Oltova A, and Mayer J
- Subjects
- Adult, Exons, False Negative Reactions, Humans, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence, Male, Models, Genetic, Pathology, Molecular methods, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcr genetics, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Translocation, Genetic, Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl metabolism, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive diagnosis, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive genetics, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Constant BCR-ABL transcript level >or=0.1% (IS) in patients with CML responding to imatinib with complete cytogenetic remission may indicate mutation analysis.
- Author
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Poláková KM, Polívková V, Rulcová J, Klamová H, Jurcek T, Dvoráková D, Zácková D, Pospísil Z, Mayer J, and Moravcová J
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Benzamides, Female, Humans, Imatinib Mesylate, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive genetics, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive pathology, Male, Middle Aged, Remission Induction, Reproducibility of Results, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Cytogenetic Analysis, Fusion Proteins, bcr-abl genetics, Leukemia, Myelogenous, Chronic, BCR-ABL Positive drug therapy, Mutation, Piperazines therapeutic use, Pyrimidines therapeutic use, RNA, Messenger genetics
- Abstract
Objective: Of 140 chronic myeloid leukemia patients responding to imatinib with complete cytogenetic remission, 32 exhibited a plateau of BCR-ABL values at >or=0.1% level in a minimum of three subsequent samples (minimal duration, 6 - 9 months). Median follow-up of unchanged BCR-ABL transcript level was 12 months (range, 6 - 64). We tested this group of patient for BCR-ABL mutations to reveal resistance development and to evaluate the risk of disease progression., Materials and Methods: Altogether, 134 samples of peripheral blood of these 32 patients were tested for mutation in BCR-ABL kinase domain., Results: Mutation was detected by direct sequencing in 9 of 32 patients (28%). Loss of complete cytogenetic remission or 1 log rise of BCR-ABL was observed in five of nine patients at a median of 5 months (range, 4-17) since first detection of mutation. One patient with no mutation relapsed 12 months after the start of the BCR-ABL plateau. In 5 of 32 patients without mutation (16%), BCR-ABL level significantly decreased after the first plateau to levels that stayed unchanged for a median of 11 months (range, 7-28)., Conclusion: We show here that the BCR-ABL constant levels >or=0.1% (BCR-ABL plateau) in imatinib-responding patients may indicate mutation analysis. This approach highly reduces the number of examinations for mutation in chronic myeloid leukemia responders and may present cost-effective alternative applicable in clinical practice.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Detection and treatment of molecular relapse in acute myeloid leukemia with RUNX1 (AML1), CBFB, or MLL gene translocations: frequent quantitative monitoring of molecular markers in different compartments and correlation with WT1 gene expression.
- Author
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Doubek M, Palasek I, Pospisil Z, Borsky M, Klabusay M, Brychtova Y, Jurcek T, Jeziskova I, Krejci M, Dvorakova D, and Mayer J
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Biomarkers, Tumor analysis, Case-Control Studies, Core Binding Factor Alpha 2 Subunit analysis, Core Binding Factor beta Subunit analysis, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Myeloid-Lymphoid Leukemia Protein analysis, Neoplasm, Residual therapy, Recurrence, Young Adult, Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute diagnosis, Neoplasm Proteins analysis, Neoplasm, Residual diagnosis, Translocation, Genetic, WT1 Proteins analysis
- Abstract
Objective: Our objective was to determine the value of frequent minimal residual disease (MRD) monitoring in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) as a robust marker of impending relapse, and whether treatment benefits patients during the MRD-positive phase of their disease., Materials and Methods: Frequent MRD monitoring was performed in all AML treatment phases using real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction for fusion transcripts (CBFB/MYH11; RUNX1/RUNX1T1 fusion transcripts of MLL gene) and for the Wilms' tumor (WT1) gene. A total of 2,664 samples, taken from 79 AML patients and 6 healthy volunteers, were examined. Presence of fusion gene was detected in 25 of 79 examined patients., Results: Vast correlation was discovered for fusion transcripts as well as for the WT1 gene between levels in bone marrow (BM), peripheral blood, CD34(+) BM cells, and CD34(-) BM cells. WT1 expression, however, was usually positive for cases showing fusion transcripts negativity and in healthy volunteers. Moreover, no universal value of the WT1 expression could unequivocally discriminate between remission and relapse. Therefore, detection of molecular relapses relied on fusion transcripts only and was characterized by strong expression in CD34(+) cells. Considering relapsed patients, duration from molecular to hematological relapse was 8 to 79 days (median: 25.5 days). Twelve patients were treated (chemotherapy, gemtuzumab ozogamicin, or immunomodulation after allogeneic transplantation) for 21 molecular relapses and 14 responses to treatment were observed., Conclusions: Frequent quantitative monitoring of fusion transcripts is useful for reliably predicting hematological relapse in AML patients. Treatment for molecular relapse of AML can be successful.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. CEBPA gene mutational status: a complete screening using high-resolution melt curve analysis.
- Author
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Rázga F, Dvoráková D, Jurcek T, Jezísková I, Krístková Z, and Mayer J
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, Humans, Molecular Sequence Data, Nucleic Acid Denaturation, Transition Temperature, CCAAT-Enhancer-Binding Protein-alpha genetics, DNA Mutational Analysis methods, Mutation genetics
- Abstract
In recent years, several independent prognostic factors in cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia (CN-AML) have been reported. Mutations or the expression levels of certain genes have been often used as molecular markers for prediction of a patient's outcome or for evaluation of treatment outcome. One of them, the gene encoding CCAAT/enhanced binding protein alpha (CEBPA), plays an important role in myeloid differentiation and, when mutated, confers a favorable prognosis for patients with CN-AML. Complete mutation screening of the CEBPA gene is therefore beneficial and requires fast, precise, and sensitive diagnostic tools. Thus, for routine diagnostics, we developed a screening method using high-resolution melt curve analysis prior to direct sequencing, where only positive samples (according to reference) are further sequenced. With this approach, all positive and negative patients were successfully distinguished, and the results obtained were in absolute concordance with the direct sequence analysis.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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