Literature DB >> 11447762

Detection of minimal residual disease.

G Dölken1.   

Abstract

A high percentage of patients with leukemia, lymphoma, and solid tumors achieve a complete clinical remission after initial treatment, but the majority of these patients will finally relapse from residual tumor cells detectable in clinical remission only by the most sensitive methods. The in vitro amplification of tumor-specific DNA or RNA sequences by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) allows identification of a few neoplastic cells in 10(4) to 10(6) normal cells. Depending on the underlying malignant disease and therapeutic treatment, the presence of residual tumor cells in an individual patient may herald relapse, but a long-term stable situation or slowly vanishing tumor cells are also possible. Molecular monitoring of residual leukemia and lymphoma cells by quantitative PCR techniques has provided important information about the effectiveness of treatment and the risk of recurrent disease as shown by minimal residual disease (MRD) analysis in patients with various malignant diseases. Such diseases include childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia, after induction therapy; acute promyelocytic leukemia, during and after chemotherapy; and chronic myelogenous leukemia, during treatment with alpha-interferon and after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Evaluation of the predictive value of the detection of MRD has to take into account its evolution and course, the pathogenesis, biology, and natural course of the underlying malignant disease, the molecular genetic lesion, and finally, the type of treatment. Quantification of minimal residual cells by the recently developed real-time quantitative PCR technique will surely have a major impact on our therapeutic strategies for patients with leukemia, lymphomas, and solid tumors. Based on quantitative PCR data, the terms molecular remission and molecular relapse have to be exactly defined and validated in prospective clinical trials to assess the biological and clinical significance of MRD in various types of malignancies.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11447762     DOI: 10.1016/s0065-230x(01)82005-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adv Cancer Res        ISSN: 0065-230X            Impact factor:   6.242


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  8 in total

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