Flow cytometric assessment of CD15+CD117+ cells for the detection of minimal residual disease in adult acute myeloid leukaemia |
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Authors: | Nakamura K Ogata K An E Dan K |
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Affiliation: | Third Department of Internal Medicine, Nippon Medical School, Tokyo, Japan. |
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Abstract: | There is little information available regarding immunophenotypic monitoring of minimal residual disease (MRD) in acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). We investigated leukaemic cells co‐expressing CD15 and CD117 (CD15+CD117+) in 72 adult AML cases at diagnosis. In 22 cases (31%) with various AML subtypes, more than 5% of leukaemic cells showed the CD15+CD117+ phenotype (range 5.22–55.48%). These 22 cases were younger and had a higher complete remission (CR) rate than the other AML cases, but the CD15+CD117+ cell percentage at diagnosis showed no correlation with the CR duration among the 72 cases. The CD15+CD117+ cell percentage showed a range of 0.00–0.08% in bone marrow cells from 10 haematologically normal subjects. We also investigated CD15+CD117+ cells in sequential bone marrow samples from 17 AML patients who achieved CR and who had had more than 5% CD15+CD117+ leukaemic cells at diagnosis. Because the CD15+CD117+ cell percentage varied among these AML cases, we calculated the percentage of MRD {MRD% = [CD15+CD117+ cells (%) in each sequential marrow sample] ÷ [CD15+CD117+ cells (%) at diagnosis of the corresponding case] × 100}. A high MRD% after 10 months of CR was significantly associated with a short CR duration (P = 0.0004), whereas continuation of a well‐reduced MRD% was associated with a long CR duration. The leukaemic cells conserved the CD15+CD117+ phenotype in all of the eight cases who relapsed. Flow cytometric monitoring of CD15+CD117+ cells is simple and can be applied to a substantial fraction of AML cases. This monitoring may be useful for predicting relapse of adult AML. |
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Keywords: | acute myeloid leukaemia minimal residual disease CD15 CD117 |
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