Abstract
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is a mature B-cell malignancy characterized by marked heterogeneity. Discoveries in disease biology over the past two decades have helped explain clinical variability and heralded the arrival of the targeted therapy era. In this article, we review improvements in risk stratification which have coincided with this progress, including individual biomarkers and their incorporation into prognostic models. Amidst an ever-expanding list of biomarkers, we seek to bring focus to the essential tests to improve patient care and counseling at particular times in the disease course, beginning with prognosis at diagnosis. The majority of patients do not require treatment at the time of diagnosis, making time-to-first-treatment a key initial prognostic concern. Prognostic and predictive biomarkers are then considered at subsequent major junctures, including at the time of treatment initiation, while on therapy, and at the time of relapse on novel agents.
Acknowledgments
Sameer A. Parikh acknowledges support from the Mayo Clinic K2R Career Development Program.
Disclosure statement
PJH has no conflicts of interest to declare.
Research funding has been provided to the institution from Pharmacyclics, Janssen, AstraZeneca, TG Therapeutics, Merck, AbbVie, and Ascentage Pharma for clinical studies in which Sameer A. Parikh is a principal investigator. SAP has also participated in Advisory Board meetings of Pharmacyclics, AstraZeneca, Genentech, Gilead, GlaxoSmithKline, Verastem Oncology, and AbbVie (he was not personally compensated for his participation).
TGC has no conflicts of interest to declare.