Author/Authors :
Smirnova, S.Y. National Hematology Research Center, russia , Sidorova, Y.V. National Hematology Research Center, russia , Ryzhikova, N.V. National Hematology Research Center, russia , Sychevskaya, K.A. Lomonosov Moscow State University, russia , Parovichnikova, E.N. National Hematology Research Center, russia , Sudarikov, A.B. National Hematology Research Center, russia
Abstract :
Clonal instability of a tumor cell population in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) may complicate the monitoring of a minimal residual disease (MRD) by means of patient-specific targets identified at the disease onset. Most of the data concerning the possible instability of rearranged clonal TCR and IG genes during disease recurrence were obtained for ALL in children. The appropriate features of adult ALL, which are known to differ from those of childhood ALL in certain biological characteristics and prognosis, remain insufficiently studied. The aim of this study was to assess the stability of IG and TCR gene rearrangements in adult ALL. Rearrange-ments were identified according to the BIOMED-2 protocol (PCR followed by fragment analysis). Mismatch in clonal rearrangements at onset and relapse was identified in 83% of patients, indicating clonal instability during treatment. Clonal evolution and diversity of IG and TCR gene rearrangements may be one of the tumor progres-sion mechanisms. New rearrangements may emerge due to residual VDJ-recombinase activity in tumor cells. Also, many clonal IG and TCR gene rearrangements may be present at different levels at a diagnosis, but less abundant clones may be “invisible” due to limited detection sensitivity. Later, major clones may disappear in the course of chemotherapy, while others may proliferate. Investigation of clonal evolution and heterogeneity in ALL and their impact on the treatment efficacy will contribute to the identification of new prognostic factors and the development of therapeutic approaches
Keywords :
acute lymphoblastic leukemia , relapse , PCR , IG and TCR gene rearrangements