Concordance of peripheral blood and bone marrow measurable residual disease in adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
Lori S MufflyVandana SundaramConnie ChenIlana YurkiewiczEric KuoSarah BurnashJay Y SpiegelSally AraiMatthew J FrankLaura J JohnstonRobert LowskyEverett H MeyerRobert S NegrinAndrew R RezvaniSurbhi SidanaParveen ShirazJudith A ShizuruWen-Kai WengMichaela LiedtkeHyma T VempatyDavid Bernard MiklosPublished in: Blood advances (2021)
Monitoring of measurable residual disease (MRD) is essential to the management of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and is typically performed through repeated bone marrow (BM) assessments. Using a next-generation sequencing (NGS) MRD platform, we performed a prospective observational study evaluating the correlation between peripheral blood (PB) and BM MRD in adults with ALL receiving cellular therapies (hematopoietic cell transplantation [HCT] and chimeric antigen receptor T-cell [CAR-T] therapies). Among the study cohort (N = 69 patients; 126 paired PB/BM samples), we found strong correlation between PB and BM MRD (r = 0.87; P < .001), with a sensitivity and specificity of MRD detection in the PB of 87% and 90%, respectively, relative to MRD in the BM. MRD became detectable in the PB in 100% of patients who subsequently relapsed following HCT, with median time from MRD+ to clinical relapse of 90 days, and in 85% of patients who relapsed following CAR T, with median time from MRD+ to clinical relapse of 60 days. In adult patients with ALL undergoing cellular therapies, we demonstrate strong concordance between NGS-based MRD detected in the PB and BM. Monitoring of ALL MRD in the PB appears to be an adequate alternative to frequent invasive BM evaluations in this clinical setting.