Haematologica (Apr 2017)

miR-125b and miR-532-3p predict the efficiency of rituximab-mediated lymphodepletion in chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients. A French Innovative Leukemia Organization study

  • Anne-Laure Gagez,
  • Isabelle Duroux-Richard,
  • Stéphane Leprêtre,
  • Frédérique Orsini-Piocelle,
  • Rémi Letestu,
  • Sophie De Guibert,
  • Edouard Tuaillon,
  • Véronique Leblond,
  • Olfa Khalifa,
  • Valérie Gouilleux-Gruart,
  • Anne Banos,
  • Olivier Tournilhac,
  • Jehan Dupuis,
  • Christian Jorgensen,
  • Guillaume Cartron,
  • Florence Apparailly

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2016.153189
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 102, no. 4

Abstract

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The underlying in vivo mechanisms of rituximab action remain incompletely understood in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Recent data suggest that circulating micro-ribonucleic acids correlate with chronic lymphocytic leukemia progression and response to rituximab. Our study aimed at identifying circulating micro-ribonucleic acids that predict response to rituximab monotherapy in chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients. Using a hierarchical clustering of micro-ribonucleic acid expression profiles discriminating 10 untreated patients with low or high lymphocyte counts, we found 26 micro-ribonucleic acids significantly deregulated. Using individual real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, the expression levels of micro-ribonucleic acids representative of these two clusters were further validated in a larger cohort (n=61). MiR-125b and miR-532-3p were inversely correlated with rituximab-induced lymphodepletion (P=0.020 and P=0.001, respectively) and with the CD20 expression on CD19+ cells (P=0.0007 and P