Haematologica (Nov 2009)

Monitoring of donor chimerism in sorted CD34+ peripheral blood cells allows the sensitive detection of imminent relapse after allogeneic stem cell transplantation

  • Martin Bornhäuser,
  • Uta Oelschlaegel,
  • Uwe Platzbecker,
  • Gesine Bug,
  • Karin Lutterbeck,
  • Michael G. Kiehl,
  • Johannes Schetelig,
  • Alexander Kiani,
  • Thomas Illmer,
  • Markus Schaich,
  • Catrin Theuser,
  • Brigitte Mohr,
  • Cornelia Brendel,
  • Axel A. Fauser,
  • Stefan Klein,
  • Hans Martin,
  • Gerhard Ehninger,
  • Christian Thiede

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2009.007765
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 94, no. 11

Abstract

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Analysis of donor chimerism is an important diagnostic tool to assess the risk of relapse after allogeneic stem cell transplantation, especially in patients lacking a specific marker suitable for monitoring of minimal residual disease. We prospectively investigated the predictive value of donor chimerism analyses in sorted CD34+ peripheral blood cells in 90 patients with acute leukemia and myelodysplastic syndrome. The cumulative incidence of relapse after four years was significantly increased in cases with decreasing or incomplete CD34+ donor chimerism (57% vs. 18%, p=0.0001). Multivariate analysis confirmed decreasing CD34+ donor chimerism as an independent predictor of relapse and inferior survival. The interval between a decrease of CD34+ chimerism of less than 80% and hematologic relapse was 61 days (range 0–567). Monitoring of CD34+ donor chimerism in the peripheral blood allows prediction of imminent relapse after allogeneic stem cell transplantation even when a disease-specific marker is lacking.