Relative expansion of CD19-negative very-early normal B-cell precursors in children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia after CD19 targeting by blinatumomab and CAR-T cell therapy: implications for flow cytometric detection of minimal residual disease.
Ekaterina MikhailovaAlexandra SemchenkovaOlga IllarionovaSvetlana KashporVarvara BrilliantovaElena ZakharovaSvetlana LebedevaAndrea ZangrandoNatalia BocharovaLarisa ShelikhovaYulia DiakonovaVladimir ZhogovRimma KhismatullinaOlga MolostovaBarbara BuldiniElena RaykinaSergey LarinYulia OlshanskayaNatalia MiakovaGalina NovichkovaMikhail A MaschanAlexander M PopovPublished in: British journal of haematology (2021)
CD19-directed treatment in B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (BCP-ALL) frequently leads to the downmodulation of targeted antigens. As multicolour flow cytometry (MFC) application for minimal/measurable residual disease (MRD) assessment in BCP-ALL is based on B-cell compartment study, CD19 loss could hamper MFC-MRD monitoring after blinatumomab or chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapy. The use of other antigens (CD22, CD10, CD79a, etc.) as B-lineage gating markers allows the identification of CD19-negative leukaemia, but it could also lead to misidentification of normal very-early CD19-negative BCPs as tumour blasts. In the current study, we summarized the results of the investigation of CD19-negative normal BCPs in 106 children with BCP-ALL who underwent CD19 targeting (blinatumomab, n = 64; CAR-T, n = 25; or both, n = 17). It was found that normal CD19-negative BCPs could be found in bone marrow after CD19-directed treatment more frequently than in healthy donors and children with BCP-ALL during chemotherapy or after stem cell transplantation. Analysis of the antigen expression profile revealed that normal CD19-negative BCPs could be mixed up with residual leukaemic blasts, even in bioinformatic analyses of MFC data. The results of our study should help to investigate MFC-MRD more accurately in patients who have undergone CD19-targeted therapy, even in cases with normal CD19-negative BCP expansion.
Keyphrases
- nk cells
- bone marrow
- stem cell transplantation
- cell therapy
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- stem cells
- immune response
- low dose
- mesenchymal stem cells
- machine learning
- liver failure
- flow cytometry
- drug delivery
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- ejection fraction
- combination therapy
- mechanical ventilation
- sensitive detection