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Clinical Cancer Research 13, 6136-6143, October 15, 2007. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-07-1112
© 2007 American Association for Cancer Research

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Imaging, Diagnosis, Prognosis

A Half-Log Increase in BCR-ABL RNA Predicts a Higher Risk of Relapse in Patients with Chronic Myeloid Leukemia with an Imatinib-Induced Complete Cytogenetic Response

Richard D. Press1, Chad Galderisi1, Rui Yang1, Carole Rempfer1, Stephanie G. Willis2, Michael J. Mauro2, Brian J. Druker2,3 and Michael W.N. Deininger2

Authors' Affiliations: 1 Department of Pathology, Center for Hematologic Malignancies, 2 Cancer Institute, and 3 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon

Requests for reprints: Richard D. Press, Department of Pathology, L113, Oregon Health & Science University, 3181 Southwest Sam Jackson Park Road, Portland, OR 97201. Phone: 503-494-2317; Fax: 503-494-2025; E-mail: pressr{at}ohsu.edu.

Purpose: Imatinib induces a complete cytogenetic response (CCR) in most chronic myeloid leukemia patients in chronic phase. Although CCR is usually durable, a minority of patients relapse. Biomarkers capable of predicting those CCR patients with a higher risk of relapse would improve therapeutic management.

Experimental Design: To assess whether changes in BCR-ABL RNA levels are a prognostic biomarker predictive of relapse, we regularly monitored transcript levels [every 3 months (median)] in 90 patients with CCR during 49 months (median) of imatinib therapy.

Results: Throughout follow-up, the 20 patients with eventual relapse had higher transcript levels than the durable responders. Major molecular response (MMR; >3-log reduction of BCR-ABL RNA) was attained by 76 patients (12 with subsequent relapse) and was a significant predictor of prolonged relapse-free survival (P = 0.0008). A minimal 0.5-log increase in transcripts (before relapse; experienced by 42 patients, 16 with subsequent relapse) conveyed a significantly shorter relapse-free survival (P = 0.0017). Loss of MMR (transcript increase to <2.5-log reduction, before relapse; experienced by 33 patients, 11 with subsequent relapse) was also predictive of shortened relapse-free survival (P = 0.0003). A complete molecular response (undetectable transcripts by nested PCR) was attained by 28 MMR patients (one with subsequent relapse) and conveyed a significantly prolonged relapse-free survival (P = 0.0052).

Conclusions: In chronic myeloid leukemia patients with an imatinib-induced CCR, a minimal half-log increase in BCR-ABL RNA (including loss of MMR) is a significant risk factor for future relapse. The achievement of a complete molecular response imparts longer progression-free survival than the achievement of an MMR.




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Copyright © 2007 by the American Association for Cancer Research.