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Utility of Immunophenotypic Measurable Residual Disease in Adult Acute Myeloid Leukemia—Real-World Context

Authors :
Nikhil Patkar
Chinmayee Kakirde
Prasanna Bhanshe
Swapnali Joshi
Shruti Chaudhary
Yajamanam Badrinath
Sitaram Ghoghale
Nilesh Deshpande
Shraddha Kadechkar
Gaurav Chatterjee
Sadhana Kannan
Dhanalaxmi Shetty
Anant Gokarn
Sachin Punatkar
Avinash Bonda
Lingaraj Nayak
Hasmukh Jain
Bhausaheb Bagal
Hari Menon
Manju Sengar
Syed Hasan Khizer
Navin Khattry
Prashant Tembhare
Sumeet Gujral
Papagudi Subramanian
Source :
Frontiers in Oncology, Vol 9 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2019.

Abstract

Introduction: One of the mainstays of chemotherapy in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is induction with a goal to achieve morphological complete remission (CR). However, not all patients by this remission criterion achieve long-term remission and a subset relapse. This relapse is explained by the presence of measurable residual disease (MRD).Methods: We accrued 451 consecutive patients of adult AML (from March 2012 to December 2017) after informed consent. All patients received standard chemotherapy. MRD testing was done at post-induction and, if feasible, post-consolidation using 8- and later 10-color FCM. Analysis of MRD was done using a combination of difference from normal and leukemia-associated immunophenotype approaches. Conventional karyotyping and FISH were done as per standard recommendations, and patients were classified into favorable, intermediate, and poor cytogenetic risk groups. The presence of FLT3-ITD, NPM1, and CEBPA mutations was detected by a fragment length analysis-based assay.Results: As compared to Western data, our cohort of patients was younger with a median age of 35 years. There were 62 induction deaths in this cohort (13.7%), and 77 patients (17.1%) were not in morphological remission. The median follow-up was 26.0 months. Poor-risk cytogenetics and the presence of FLT3-ITD were significantly associated with inferior outcome. The presence of post-induction MRD assessment was significantly associated with adverse outcome with respect to OS (p = 0.01) as well as RFS (p = 0.004). Among established genetic subgroups, detection of MRD in intermediate cytogenetic and NPM1 mutated groups was also highly predictive of inferior outcome. On multivariate analysis, immunophenotypic MRD at the end of induction and FLT3-ITD emerged as independent prognostic factors predictive for outcome.Conclusion: This is the first data from a resource-constrained real-world setting demonstrating the utility of AML MRD as well as long-term outcome of AML. Our data is in agreement with other studies that determination of MRD is extremely important in predicting outcome. AML MRD is a very useful guide for guiding post-remission strategies in AML and should be incorporated into routine treatment algorithms.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2234943X
Volume :
9
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Oncology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8bf0bbc6eea84669933cd77e049549c0
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2019.00450