Immune reconstitution in children following chemotherapy for acute leukemia
Anthony P. Williams,
Jessica Bate,
Rachael Brooks,
Julia Chisholm,
Stuart C. Clarke,
Elizabeth Dixon,
Saul N. Faust,
Angeliki Galanopoulou,
Paul T. Heath,
Thomas Maishman,
Susan Mapstone,
Soonie R. Patel,
Ajay Vora,
Sam A. Wilding,
Juliet C. Gray
Affiliations
Anthony P. Williams
Faculty of Medicine and Institute for Life Sciences University of Southampton Southampton UK
Jessica Bate
NIHR Southampton Clinical Research Facility NIHR Southampton Biomedical Research Centre and Southampton NIHR CRUK Experimental Cancer Medicine Centre University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust Southampton UK
Rachael Brooks
Faculty of Medicine and Institute for Life Sciences University of Southampton Southampton UK
Julia Chisholm
Department of Paediatric Oncology Royal Marsden Hospital Sutton Surrey
Stuart C. Clarke
Faculty of Medicine and Institute for Life Sciences University of Southampton Southampton UK
Elizabeth Dixon
Southampton Clinical Trials Unit Southampton UK
Saul N. Faust
Faculty of Medicine and Institute for Life Sciences University of Southampton Southampton UK
Angeliki Galanopoulou
Southampton Clinical Trials Unit Southampton UK
Paul T. Heath
Paediatric Infectious Diseases Research Group & Vaccine Institute St. George's University of London and St. Georges University Hospitals NHS Trust London UK
Thomas Maishman
Southampton Clinical Trials Unit Southampton UK
Susan Mapstone
NIHR Southampton Clinical Research Facility NIHR Southampton Biomedical Research Centre and Southampton NIHR CRUK Experimental Cancer Medicine Centre University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust Southampton UK
Soonie R. Patel
Paediatric Department Croydon University Hospital Croydon UK
Ajay Vora
Department of Paediatric Haematology Great Ormond Street Hospital London UK
Sam A. Wilding
Southampton Clinical Trials Unit Southampton UK
Juliet C. Gray
Faculty of Medicine and Institute for Life Sciences University of Southampton Southampton UK
Abstract Although survival rates for pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia are now excellent, this is at the expense of prolonged chemotherapy regimens. We report the long‐term immune effects in children treated according to the UK Medical Research Council UKALL 2003 protocol. Peripheral blood lymphocyte subsets and immunoglobulin levels were studied in 116 participants, at six time points, during and for 18‐month following treatment, with 30‐39 patients analyzed at each time point. Total lymphocytes were reduced during maintenance chemotherapy and remained low 18 months following treatment completion. CD4 T cells remained significantly reduced 18 months after treatment, but CD8 cells and natural killer cells recovered to normal values. The fall in naïve B‐cell numbers during maintenance was most marked, but numbers recovered rapidly after cessation of treatment. Memory B cells, particularly nonclass‐switched memory B cells, remained below normal levels 18 months following treatment. All immunoglobulin subclasses were reduced during treatment compared to normal values, with IgM levels most affected. This study demonstrates that immune reconstitution differs between lymphocyte compartments. Although total B‐cell numbers recover rapidly, disruption of memory/naïve balance persists and T‐cell compartment persist at 18 months. This highlights the impact of modern chemotherapy regimens on immunity, and thus, infectious susceptibility and response to immunization.