| Literature DB >> 27147570 |
Monika Podhorecka1, Dorota Halicka2, Agnieszka Szymczyk1, Arkadiusz Macheta1, Sylwia Chocholska1, Marek Hus1, Zbigniew Darzynkiewicz2.
Abstract
Red blood cell distribution width (RDW) is a quantitative measure of the variability in size of circulating erythrocytes. It was recently reported that RDW is a prognostic factor for infection diseases, cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases, as well as some neoplasms. Moreover, RDW is remarkably strong predictor of longevity, including all causes of death, for adults aged 45 years and older. To explain this occurrence it was proposed that persistent IGFs/mTOR signaling is one of the factors that play a role in affecting the RDW and mortality.The above observations induced us to analyze the prognostic role of RDW in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) being the most frequent type of adult leukemia in Western countries. The obtained results have shown that RDW may be considered as a potential CLL prognostic marker. Elevated RDW level at the moment of diagnosis was associated with advanced disease and presence of other poor prognostic factors. It is also connected with overall survival indicating shorter time in patients with elevated RDW. It is possible that the presently observed correlation between mortality and RDW of the CLL patients is affected by their metabolic (IGF-1/mTOR driven)- rather than chronological- aging. The patients with high level of RDW are expected to have an increased persistent level of IGF-1/mTOR signaling. Within the framework of personalized therapy, these CLL patients therefore would be expected to be more sensitive to the treatment with mTOR inhibitors.Entities:
Keywords: CD38; CLL; RDW; ZAP-70; mTOR
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27147570 PMCID: PMC5078056 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.9055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Clinical characteristics of analyzed CLL patients
| Characteristics | Median (range) | Number of patients/percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Female | 30 | |
| Male | 36 | |
| 63 (38–85) | ||
| 0 | 31% | |
| I | 17% | |
| II | 30% | |
| III | 8% | |
| IV | 14% | |
| 56% | ||
| 44% | ||
| Negative | 68% | |
| Positive | 32% | |
| Low-risk | 60% | |
| High-risk | 40% | |
| Fludarabine-based regimens | 30 | |
| Chlorambucil+/−Prednisone | 7 | |
| Bendamustine | 1 |
Clinical parameters of analyzed CLL patients of Low-RDW (< 14.5%) and High-RDW (> 14.5%) groups
| Low - RDW Group | High -RDW Group | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 59 | 63 | NS | |
| 48 ± 43.5 | 75.7 + 60.3 | NS | |
| 12.8 ± 1,7 | 11.4 ± 1.8 | ||
| 157 ± 75,2 | 140 ± 70.6 | NS | |
| 370 ± 126 | 408 ± 145 | NS | |
| β | 2.34 ± 0.7 | 5.44 ± 2.7 | NS |
Statistical significance is indicated (p values); NS – not significant.
Figure 1Clinical stadium according to Rai classification [30] of the analyzed CLL patients in High-RDW group (RDW > 14.5%) and Low-RDW group (RDW < 14.5%)
Figure 2RDW values in CLL risk groups
RDW values in ZAP-70 negative (ZAP-70-) and ZAP-70 positive (ZAP–70+) CLL patients (A). RDW values of CLL patients in CD38 negative (CD38−) and CD38 positive (CD38+) group (B). RDW values of analyzed patients in the standard-risk cytogenetic group (del13q14.3, trisomy 12, or no changes detected) and in the high-risk cytogenetic group (17p13.1 or 11q22.3) (C). All graphs show mean ± standard deviation. NS not statistically significant.
Figure 3Time to treatment (A) and total survival time (B) demonstrated by Kaplan-Meier curves
The patients were stratified according to RDW level (Low-RDW group versus High-RDW group). Statistical significance is indicated.