Assessment of Minimal Residual Disease in Standard-Risk AML
Guy's Hospital · Cancer Genetics (United States) · +11 more institutions
Abstract
Despite the molecular heterogeneity of standard-risk acute myeloid leukemia (AML), treatment decisions are based on a limited number of molecular genetic markers and morphology-based assessment of remission. Sensitive detection of a leukemia-specific marker (e.g., a mutation in the gene encoding nucleophosmin [NPM1]) could improve prognostication by identifying submicroscopic disease during remission.
We used a reverse-transcriptase quantitative polymerase-chain-reaction assay to detect minimal residual disease in 2569 samples obtained from 346 patients with NPM1-mutated AML who had undergone intensive treatment in the National Cancer Research Institute AML17 trial. We used a custom 51-gene panel to perform targeted sequencing of 223 samples obtained at the time of diagnosis and 49 samples obtained at the time of relapse. Mutations associated with preleukemic clones were tracked by means of digital polymerase chain reaction.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 77.23
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 39
Authors
22Topics & keywords
- NPM1
- Myeloid leukemia
- Nucleophosmin
- Minimal residual disease
- Oncology
- Leukemia
- Disease
- Medicine
- Good health and well-being
Funding
- NCNational Cancer Research Institute
- WTWellcome Trust
- CRCancer Research UK
- NINational Institute for Health and Care ResearchAward: RP-PG-0108-10093
- LALeukaemia and Lymphoma Research
- KCKing's College London
- UCUniversity College London
- CUCardiff University
- MRMedical Research CouncilAward: MR/L008963/1
- PGProgramme Grants for Applied Research