Summary. Re-treatment with rituximab for B-cell nonHodgkin's lymphoma (NHL) relapsing after previous rituximab therapy has recently been shown to be clinically efficacious. Although the mechanism of resistance to rituximab re-treatment in non-responding patients is unknown, it is possible that loss of CD20 expression in the relapsed NHL could be important in some patients. We examined the incidence and nature of CD20 negative relapses following rituximab therapy in aggressive B-cell NHL treated at our institution. Of a total of 18 patients who received rituximab, 13 have relapsed, with 10 patients subsequently undergoing repeat tissue biopsy. Six of these 10 patients (60%) were shown to have lost CD20 expression by either immunohistochemistry and/or flow cytometry. Furthermore, three of the six patients who relapsed with CD20-negative NHL also suffered relapses at unusual anatomical sites. We conclude that loss of CD20 expression in aggressive B-cell NHL relapsing post-rituximab therapy is common. As such, repeat tissue biopsy should be undertaken to document CD20 expression by both flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry prior to considering repeated courses of rituximab in relapsed aggressive lymphomas.
Core binding factor acute myeloid leukemia (CBF AML), with t(8;21)(q22;q22), inv(16)(p13q22) or t(16;16)(p13;q22) and the associated fusion gene transcripts AML1/ETO or CBFbeta/MYH11, has a favourable clinical prognosis although significant numbers of patients still suffer relapse. We examined the prognostic utility of serial bone marrow minimal residual disease (MRD) monitoring by RQ-PCR in a cohort of patients with CBF AML with long term clinical follow-up. Twenty-nine patients were evaluated with a median follow of 34 months. Twelve relapses occurred at a median of 11 months (range 4 - 17) from diagnosis. RQ-PCR levels at diagnosis, post-induction chemotherapy and post-consolidation were not predictive of outcome. However, a >or=1 log(10) rise at any stage in transcript level relative to the level from a remission bone marrow sample correlated with inferior leukemia free survival (LFS) and imminent morphologic relapse (hazard ratio 8.6). Relapses occurred a median of 60 days (range 45 - 272) after a log(10) rise. A >or=1 log(10) rise in transcript levels strongly predicts subsequent morphologic relapse in CBF AML and therefore defines molecular relapse. Our data support a simple RQ-PCR model for prediction of impending relapse which has the potential for widespread clinical applicability. Prospective identification of high risk patients will enable clinical trials to assess the efficacy of treatment initiated at molecular relapse.
Adoptive immunotherapy using autologous EpsteinBarr virus (EBV)-specific cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (auto-CTL) can regress posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLD). Widespread applicability of auto-CTL remains constrained. Generation is timeconsuming, and auto-CTL cannot be established in patients treated with the B-cell depleting antibody rituximab. By contrast, pregenerated allogeneic CTL (allo-CTL) offers immediate accessibility. Allo-CTL has previously shown efficacy in "early" polyclonal-PTLD. We treated three patients with aggressive, advanced monoclonal-PTLD following solid-organ transplantation. All were refractory to at least three prior therapies. Despite HLA disparity, there was negligible toxicity, with early in vivo antiviral efficacy and reconstitution of EBV peptide-specific immunity. Two patients attained complete remission (CR). One remains in CR 17 months following therapy, coincident with persistence of donor-derived tumor targeted EBV-specific CTL; the other died of non-PTLD related pathology. In the third patient, autopsy demonstrated homing of allo-CTL at the tumor site. Larger prospective studies of EBV-specific allo-CTL in PTLD are warranted.
There are a number of observations that suggest the dsRNA-activated protein kinase, PKR, may play an active role in formation and maintenance of leukemia, including nonrandom chromosomal deletions in acute leukemia as well as truncations and deletions of the PKR gene in some leukemia cell lines. However, there is little direct evidence from patient material that this is so. Here we show that full-length PKR is present but not active in 21 of 28 patient samples from B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL). PKR from these patients was unable to auto-activate or phosphorylate substrates but was able to bind dsRNA. Furthermore, the lack of PKR activation was not due to differing levels of the PKR activator, PACT nor of the PKR inhibitor, p58 IPK . We compared PKR status with clinical parameters and disease staging. No differences were found between the 2 groups in terms of staging (modified Rai or Binet), age, CD38 status, p53 status, 11q23 deletion status or CEP12 deletion status. However, there was a significant correlation between deletion in 13q14.3 and lack of PKR activity. We show that B-CLL cells appear to contain a soluble inhibitor of PKR, as lysates from cells lacking PKR activity were able to inhibit exogenous PKR in mixing experiments. Finally, we show suppression of PKR activity was still present following ultrafilitration through a 10,000 Da cutoff filter but was lost upon extraction with phenol/chloroform or by high salt washing. This data suggests loss of PKR activity may contribute to the formation and/or maintenance of CLL.
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