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Original Article

Detection of Residual Disease in Pediatric B-Cell Precursor Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia by Comparative Phenotype Mapping: Method and Significance

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Pages 295-308 | Received 18 Nov 1999, Published online: 01 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

The present review summarizes our efforts in developing a novel immunologic approach (“Comparative Phenotype Mapping”) targeted at assessing minimal residual disease (MRD) in B-cell precursor (BCP) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients. The method relies on quantitatively aberrant, leukemia-associated antigen expression patterns which allow to discriminate leukemic from normal BCP using a limited panel of antibody combinations and multidimensional flow cytometry. In an analysis of 63 follow up bone marrow samples of patients with BCP-ALL we show that this approach enables to efficiently detect MRD. Further clinical observation revealed that the patients which were MRD-positive by flow cytometry (although in morphological remission) had a very high probability of early disease recurrence compared to the good chances of a relapse-free survival (RFS) in the MRD-negative cohort (RFS 0.0 vs. 0.76 at 3 years). Comparative Phenotype Mapping thus proves to be a reliable method for MRD detection in BCP-ALL. Concluding remarks relate to the optional applications of the method as well as to future perspectives. An ongoing large prospective study which we are now conducting on the basis of Comparative Phenotype Mapping will clarify the clinical significance of MRD detection in ALL patients by this method, and will determine its value compared to related as well as molecular-genetic techniques.

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