Department of Medical & Molecular Genetics, King's College London School of Medicine, London, United Kingdom; and.
Department of Clinical Immunology, University of Birmingham Medical School, Edgbaston, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
Blood. 2014 Nov 27;124(23):3345-55. doi: 10.1182/blood-2014-05-577593. Epub 2014 Jul 21.
The past 40 years have witnessed major advances in defining the cytogenetic aberrations, mutational landscape, epigenetic profiles, and expression changes underlying hematological malignancies. Although it has become apparent that acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is highly heterogeneous at the molecular level, the standard framework for risk stratification guiding transplant practice in this disease remains largely based on pretreatment assessment of cytogenetics and a limited panel of molecular genetic markers, coupled with morphological assessment of bone marrow (BM) blast percentage after induction. However, application of more objective methodology such as multiparameter flow cytometry (MFC) has highlighted the limitations of morphology for reliable determination of remission status. Moreover, there is a growing body of evidence that detection of subclinical levels of leukemia (ie, minimal residual disease, MRD) using MFC or molecular-based approaches provides powerful independent prognostic information. Consequently, there is increasing interest in the use of MRD detection to provide early end points in clinical trials and to inform patient management. However, implementation of MRD assessment into clinical practice remains a major challenge, hampered by differences in the assays and preferred analytical methods employed between routine laboratories. Although this should be addressed through adoption of standardized assays with external quality control, it is clear that the molecular heterogeneity of AML coupled with increasing understanding of its clonal architecture dictates that a "one size fits all" approach to MRD detection in this disease is not feasible. However, with the range of platforms now available, there is considerable scope to realistically track treatment response in every patient.
过去的 40 年来,人们在确定血液恶性肿瘤的细胞遗传学异常、突变景观、表观遗传谱和表达变化方面取得了重大进展。尽管很明显,急性髓细胞白血病 (AML) 在分子水平上具有高度异质性,但指导该疾病移植实践的风险分层标准框架在很大程度上仍然基于治疗前的细胞遗传学评估和有限的分子遗传标志物面板,以及诱导后骨髓 (BM) 原始细胞百分比的形态学评估。然而,应用更客观的方法,如多参数流式细胞术 (MFC),突出了形态学在可靠确定缓解状态方面的局限性。此外,越来越多的证据表明,使用 MFC 或基于分子的方法检测亚临床水平的白血病(即微小残留病,MRD)提供了强大的独立预后信息。因此,人们越来越感兴趣地将 MRD 检测用于提供临床试验中的早期终点,并为患者管理提供信息。然而,MRD 评估在临床实践中的实施仍然是一个主要挑战,受到常规实验室之间使用的检测方法和首选分析方法的差异的阻碍。虽然通过采用具有外部质量控制的标准化检测方法可以解决这个问题,但 AML 的分子异质性以及对其克隆结构的不断深入理解表明,针对这种疾病的“一刀切”的 MRD 检测方法是不可行的。然而,随着目前可用的各种平台,在每个患者中都有相当大的范围来真实地跟踪治疗反应。