In a recent paper, researchers outlined the utility of minimal residual disease (MRD) among patient with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and how its monitoring at specific timepoints has proven useful for stratifying patients and helping to ensure appropriate treatment decisionsMRD
The use of minimal residual disease (MRD) monitoring has been established as a valuable tool in various cancers, notably acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Among its uses in ALL is patient stratification, from low-risk to very-high-risk groups of patients, offering guidance for clinical decision making.
In a recent paper published in Expert Review of Hematology, researchers outlined the utility of MRD among these patients and how its monitoring at specific timepoints has proven useful for stratifying patients and helping to ensure appropriate treatment decisions.
“MRD monitoring has changed the definition of remission in pediatric ALL,” emphasized the researchers. “Several studies have found a clear correlation between MRD levels and outcome in children with ALL, endorsing the concept that quantification of MRD after induction of chemotherapy provides a reliable measurement of the in vivo drug sensitivity of leukemic blasts, and therefore guide patients’ stratification and risk-based therapeutic approaches in the context of well-designed clinical studies.”
Among patients with low-risk disease, who have favorable 5-year survival rates, MRD has proven useful in determining patients with highly curable disease, which can help avoid short-term morbidity and mortality as well as long-term sequelae. Recently, long-term study results showed high survival rates among patients with B-cell precursor ALL (BCP-ALL) who were included in the trial after having rapid and significant disease clearance. Among these patients, the estimated 5-year event-free survival rate was 92% and estimated 5-year overall survival rate was 96%.
Among patients with high-risk ALL subtypes, intensive chemotherapy is continued for children and adolescents after achieving multiparametric flow cytometry or immunoglobulin/T-cell MRD negativity following remission induction. In one ongoing study, patients are stratified into the high-risk group if their MRD is ≥5x10-4 following consolidation treatment or if they have BCP-ALL and have polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-determined MRD ≥5x10-4 after induction treatment and are still MRD positive following consolidation treatment.
MRD is also used among patients with very-high-risk disease that is associated with a poor prognosis despite receiving aggressive chemotherapy. For these patients, who are MRD positive following induction and continue to be MRD positive following consolidation treatment, MRD is used prior to transplantation to determine risk of relapse following the procedure.
As MRD continues to have an integral role in patient stratification in ALL, novel methods are entering the arena, offering potential for more specific and sensitive monitoring that can in turn lead to optimized stratification and targeted intervention.
“The new tools of digital droplet PCR, next-generation sequencing, and next-generation flow cytometry, the standardization of which is currently ongoing has shown to be important to evaluate MRD in the research setting, and are partially already incorporated and will be soon more and more incorporated in clinical trials due to their ability to overcome the limitation of standard approaches,” explained the researchers.
However, they add that these methods are time consuming and costly due to a need for individual design and validation for each mutation. As a result, say the researchers, these methods may be appropriate for MRD monitoring of commonly occurring variants but may be more challenging for less common variants that require a personal assay design.
Reference
Ceppi F, Rizzati F, Colombini A, Conter V, Cazzaniga G. Utilising the prognostic impact of minimal residual disease in treatment decisions for pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Expert Rev Hematol. 2021;14(9):795-807. doi:10.1080/17474086.2021.1967137
Sustaining Compassionate Trauma Care Across Communities
September 30th 2024September is National Recovery Month, and we are bringing you another limited-edition month-long podcast series with our Strategic Alliance Partner, UPMC Health Plan. In our final episode, we speak with Lyndra Bills, MD, and Shari Hutchison, MS.
Listen
Frameworks for Advancing Health Equity: Community Wellness Centers
September 27th 2024Delia Orosco, MS, director of Community Wellness Centers at Inland Empire Health Plan, shares insight into innovative initiatives provided by the wellness centers and their new mobile mammogram clinics.
Listen
Accountable Care Organizations and HPV Vaccine Uptake: A Multilevel Analysis
October 24th 2024The authors evaluated whether adolescents receiving care at accountable care organizations (ACOs) vs non-ACOs were more likely to initiate and complete the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination series.
Read More
Sarcoma Care: Biomarker Advancements Shape the Future
October 24th 2024At the regional Institute for Value-Based Medicine® event in Boston, Vinayak Venkataraman, MD, medical oncologist at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School, was a panelist for the discussion, “Recent Advancements in Identifying Predictive Biomarkers for Sarcomas."
Read More