Peripheral Blood CD34 Donor Chimerism has Greater Clinical Utility Than CD3 for Detecting Relapse after Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplantation for Acute Myeloid Leukemia or Myelodysplastic Syndrome.

Transplantation and cellular therapy(2023)

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摘要
Monitoring of donor chimerism (DC) may detect early relapse following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-SCT) for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) or myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS). Most centers use unfractionated peripheral blood or T-cells to monitor DC, although CD34+ DC may be more predictive. The limited adoption of CD34+ DC may be due to the lack of detailed, comparative studies. To address this knowledge gap, we compared peripheral blood CD34+ and CD3+ DC in 134 patients who underwent allo-SCT for AML or MDS. In July 2011, the Alfred Hospital Bone Marrow Transplantation Service adopted routine monitoring of DC in the lineage-specific CD34+ and CD3+ cell subsets from peripheral blood at 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, and 12 months post-transplantation for AML or MDS. Immunologic interventions, including rapid withdrawal of immunosuppression, azacitidine, and donor lymphocyte infusion, were prespecified for CD34+ DC ≤80%. Overall, CD34+ DC ≤80% detected 32 of 40 relapses (positive predictive value [PPV], 68%; negative predictive value [NPV], 91%), compared with 13 of 40 relapses for CD3+ DC ≤80% (PPV, 52%; NPV, 75%). Receiver operating characteristic analysis showed the superiority of CD34+ DC, with the greatest value at day 120 post-transplantation. CD3+ DC provided additional value in only 3 cases, preceding CD34+ DC ≤80% by 1 month. We further show that the CD34+ DC sample can be used to detect NPM1mut, with the combination of CD34+ DC ≤80% and NPM1mut identifying the highest risk of relapse. Among the 24 patients in morphologic remission at the time of CD34+ DC ≤80%, 15 (62.5%) responded to immunologic interventions (rapid withdrawal of immunosuppression, azacitidine, or donor lymphocyte infusion) with recovery of CD34+ DC >80%, and 11 of these patients remained in complete remission for a median of 34 months (range, 28 to 97 months). In contrast, the other 9 patients did not respond to the clinical intervention and relapsed within a median of 59 days after detecting CD34+ DC ≤80%. The CD34+ DC was significantly higher in responders than in nonresponders (median, 72% versus 56%; P = .015, Mann-Whitney U test). Overall, monitoring of CD34+ DC was considered clinically useful (early diagnosis of relapse enabling preemptive therapy or predicting low risk of relapse) in 107 of 125 evaluable patients (86%). Our findings show that peripheral blood CD34+ DC is feasible and superior to CD3+ DC for predicting relapse. It also provides a source of DNA for measurable residual disease testing, which may further stratify the risk of relapse. If validated by an independent cohort, our results suggest that CD34+ should be used in preference to CD3+ DC for detecting early relapse and guiding immunologic interventions following allo-SCT for AML or MDS.
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