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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Dynamics of BCR-ABL mRNA expression in first-line therapy of chronic myelogenous leukemia patients with imatinib or interferon alpha/ara-C.

Cornelius F. WallerRuediger HehlmannHeiko KonigUte BergerD. K. HossfeldAndreas NeubauerP. Le CoutreNorbert GattermannF. SchnellerAndreas HochhausMartin C. MüllerMichael W. DeiningerT. LahayeMathias FreundKirsten MerxWalter E. AulitzkyHarald GschaidmeierStefan FruehaufOliver G. OttmannHerbert G. SayerPeter PaschkaStefan W. KrauseSebastian KreilThomas FischerChristoph NerlA. Berndt

subject

AdultMaleCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyAntimetabolites AntineoplasticFusion Proteins bcr-ablAlpha interferonAntineoplastic AgentsBiologyGastroenterologyPiperazinesCytogeneticsRecurrenceRisk Factorshemic and lymphatic diseasesInternal medicineLeukemia Myelogenous Chronic BCR-ABL PositivemedicineHumansProspective StudiesRNA MessengerneoplasmsInterferon alfaAgedHematologyABLCross-Over Studiesbreakpoint cluster regionCytarabineInterferon-alphaImatinibHematologyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePrognosisPyrimidinesTreatment OutcomeOncologyImmunologyBenzamidesCytarabineImatinib MesylateFemaleChronic myelogenous leukemiamedicine.drug

description

We sought to determine dynamics of BCR-ABL mRNA expression levels in 139 patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) in early chronic phase, randomized to receive imatinib (n=69) or interferon (IFN)/Ara-C (n=70). The response was sequentially monitored by cytogenetics from bone marrow metaphases (n=803) and qualitative and quantitative RT-PCR from peripheral blood samples (n=1117). Complete cytogenetic response (CCR) was achieved in 60 (imatinib, 87%) vs 10 patients (IFN/Ara-C, 14%) after a median observation time of 24 months. Within the first year after CCR, best median ratio BCR-ABL/ABL was 0.087%, (imatinib, n=48) vs 0.27% (IFN/Ara-C, n=9, P=0.025). BCR-ABL was undetectable in 25 cases by real-time PCR, but in only four patients by nested PCR. Median best response in patients with relapse after CCR was 0.24% (n=3) as compared to 0.029% in patients with continuous remission (n=52, P=0.029). We conclude that (i) treatment with imatinib in newly diagnosed CML patients is associated with a rapid decrease of BCR-ABL transcript levels; (ii) nested PCR may reveal residual BCR-ABL transcripts in samples that are negative by real-time PCR; (iii) BCR-ABL transcript levels parallel cytogenetic response, and (iv) imatinib is superior to IFN/Ara-C in terms of the speed and degree of molecular responses, but residual disease is rarely eliminated.

10.1038/sj.leu.2403157https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14523462