Early Relapse After High-Dose Chemotherapy Rescued by Tumor-Free Autologous Peripheral Blood Stem Cells in Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: Importance of Monitoring for WT1-mRNA Quantitatively
- 1 January 2001
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Leukemia & Lymphoma
- Vol. 42 (1-2) , 225-229
- https://doi.org/10.3109/10428190109097695
Abstract
A 24-year-old woman who suffered from ALL with MLL gene rearrangement received high-dose chemotherapy followed by autologous PBSC transplantation during complete remission (CR). Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) used to detect MLL/LTG4 chimeric mRNA showed no minimal residual disease (MRD) in the graft or bone marrow at the transplantation. However, the leukemia relapsed four months after transplantation. Retrospective analysis of quantitative measurement of Wilms tumor gene (WT-1) mRNA showed an increased level in the bone marrow although it was within the normal range. These observations suggest that careful monitoring of MRD by quantitative measurement of WT-1 mRNA in addition to disease-specific chimeric mRNA is required to predict relapse.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- The detection of wt-1 transcripts is not associated with an increased leukemic relapse rate in patients with acute leukemia after allogeneic bone marrow or peripheral blood stem cell transplantationBone Marrow Transplantation, 2000
- Successful peripheral blood stem cell transplantation for myelodysplastic syndromeBone Marrow Transplantation, 1999
- Clinical relevance of residual disease monitoring by polymerase chain reaction in patients with ALL‐1/AF‐4 positive‐acute lymphoblastic leukaemiaBritish Journal of Haematology, 1996
- Detection of ALL-1/AF4 fusion transcript by reverse transcription- polymerase chain reaction for diagnosis and monitoring of acute leukemias with the t(4;11) translocationBlood, 1993
- Acute Leukemias with the t(4;11)(q21;q23)Leukemia & Lymphoma, 1992