| Literature DB >> 30794643 |
Jennifer Valero-Garcia1, María Del Carmen González-Espinosa2, Manuel Barrios2, Greta Carmona-Antoñanzas1, Javier García-Planells1, Carlos Ruiz-Lafora1, Ainhoa Fuentes-Gálvez2, Antonio Jiménez-Velasco2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The analysis of molecular haematopoietic chimerisms (HC) has become a well-established method to monitor the transplant evolution and to assess the risk of relapse after allogeneic stem cells transplantation (allo-STC). Different techniques and molecular markers are being used for chimerism surveillance after transplantation, including quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) and the recently developed digital PCR (dPCR). This study aims to compare the sensitivity and accuracy of both methods to quantify HC and predict early relapse.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30794643 PMCID: PMC6386495 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0212708
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Information of the allo-SCT patients included in the study.
| Patient | Sex | Leukaemia type | Marker | Relapse |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | M | MDS | SRY | YES |
| Patient 2 | M | AML | Q116-6I | NO |
| Patient 3 | M | AML | Q116-10I | YES |
| Patient 4 | F | MDS | Q116-11I | YES |
| Patient 5 | M | ALL | Q116-12I | YES |
| Patient 6 | M | AML | Q116-10I | YES |
| Patient 7 | M | AML | Q116-4I | YES |
| Patient 8 | F | ALL | Q116-31I | NO |
| Patient 9 | F | AML | Q116-7I | NO |
| Patient 10 | F | ALL | Q116-6I | YES |
| Patient 11 | F | ALL | Q116-3I | YES |
| Patient 12 | F | AML | Q116-8I | NO |
| Patient 13 | M | AML | Q116-32I | NO |
| Patient 14 | M | AML | Q116-11I | YES |
| Patient 15 | F | AML | Q116-6I | YES |
| Patient 16 | M | AML | Q116-31I | YES |
| Patient 17 | M | AML | Q116-12I | NO |
| Patient 18 | F | AML | Q116-6I | YES |
| Patient 19 | F | ALL | Q116-9I | YES |
| Patient 20 | M | ALL | Q116-8I | NO |
| Patient 21 | M | ALL | SRY | YES |
| Patient 22 | F | ALL | Q116-11I | YES |
| Patient 23 | M | MDS | Q116-5I | YES |
| Patient 24 | M | AML | Q116-11I | NO |
| Patient 25 | M | AML | SRY | YES |
| Patient 26 | M | CLL | SRY | NO |
| Patient 27 | F | AML | Q116-4I | YES |
| Patient 28 | M | CLL | Q116-6I | NO |
MDS, Myelodysplastic Syndrome; AML, Acute Myeloid Leukaemia; ALL, Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia; CLL, Chronic Lymphocytic leukaemia; ND, not defined
Fig 1Correlation of hematopoietic chimerism data as obtained on clinical samples by dPCR versus qPCR.
Chimerism was assessed for post-allo-SCT samples and obtained data were analysed for linear regression of logarithmic percent host chimerism. A very high degree of linear correlation (R2 > 0.91) was observed.
Fig 2Bland-Altmann analysis of dPCR data as compared to qPCR.
The difference between qPCR and dPCR quantification is plotted against their mean.
Fig 3Comparison of chimerism kinetics in four relapsed patients of allo-SCT assessed by dPCR and qPCR.
Follow-up analysis by qPCR and dPCR was carried out using the same host-specific marker. Data plotted represent the most informative time window in the follow-up study of each transplantation patient. iMC was detected earlier by dPCR in patients 11, 18, 21 and 25).