Background
Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) is a malignant transformation of lymphoblasts, representing the single commonest type of cancer in paediatric population. With the dawn of modern chemotherapy, virtually all children attain remission and approximately 80% are cured, but the risk of relapse remains as about 20% patients in clinical remission (CR) harbour residual leukemic blasts referred to as minimal residual disease (MRD) [
1]. The situation is however dissimilar in India. Data from various Indian cancer registries suggest occurrence of approximately 10,000 new cases of childhood ALL every year. Very few of these patients are adequately treated, and the majority die from their disease due to post-chemotherapeutic relapse. This contrasts with present cure rates of Western countries [
2].
Considering this growing number of relapse in patients, post-chemotherapy, we intended to identify their disease status during the two-year treatment period. To get to the bottom of this problem, an unambiguous template for the identification of a specific combination of CD antigens on the lymphoblasts was essential, which is easily evident and stably expressed at the onset of ALL and whose altered expression could be an index for consistent monitoring of the disease status, during and post-chemotherapy.
Neuraminic acids commonly known as sialic acids, a family of 9-carbon carboxylated monosaccharides are important constituents of the cell membrane influencing many biologic reactions either by reacting with specific surface receptors or via masking the carbohydrate recognition sites [
3‐
5]. Amongst the multiple variations of sialic acid, the most frequently occurring substitutions are
O-acetylation, especially at C-9 position generating a family of 9-
O-acetylated sialoglycoproteins henceforth abbreviated as
OAcSGP. Sialic acid binding lectins and/or monoclonal antibodies (mAb) is commonly used to study sialylation patterns [
3,
6‐
9]. 9-
O-acetylated sialoglycans are detectable at low levels on normal human B-lymphocytes and their consistent decrease has been observed in some disease [
3]. Pathological variations of the sialoglycans are also encountered [
10,
11]. However, their detailed biological significance, especially as a potential biomarker in ALL remains ambiguous.
The preferential affinity of a lectin, Achatinin-H, towards terminal
N-acetyl-9-
O-acetylneuraminic acids-α2-6-
N acetylated galactosamine (Neu5,9Ac
2α2-6GalNAc) [
12‐
14] allowed us to identify an enhanced disease-associated expression of molecules having terminal Neu5,9Ac
2α2-6GalNAc as sialo-glycotope on peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of ALL patient [
3,
15‐
20]. In contrast, a basal level of expression of
OAcSGP in normal individuals and patients with other cross-reactive haematological disorders such as chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML), acute myelogenous leukaemia (AML), chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL), non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), thalassemia and aplastic anaemia confirmed the specificity of this biomarker [
3,
15‐
20]. These
OAcSGPs are highly immunogenic [
21‐
24], found as immune-complexed
OAcSGP in the patients' sera [
25], and play a prominent role in promoting the survival of these lymphoblasts [
26‐
28].
Cyto-morphological criteria are insufficient because the threshold of detection of leukemic cells is only 1–5%. MRD is usually detected by flow-cytometric immunophenotyping or PCR analysis of breakpoint fusion regions of chromosome aberrations and by detection of clone-specific immunoglobulin and T-cell receptor gene rearrangements. Modern treatment protocols utilize the biological and clinical information to tailor the intensity of therapy to the risk of relapse. Recent MRD study shows that monitoring children at consecutive time point gives clinically relevant insight into the effectiveness of the treatment [
29,
30].
Therefore, in this investigation, our endeavour was to monitor the differential expression of OAcSGP along with the aberrant expression of other known B and T lineage-specific CD antigens from the peripheral blood (PB) and bone marrow (BM) of paediatric ALL patients at the onset of the disease and during chemotherapy, as per the MCP841 protocol. Accordingly, we have longitudinally monitored 109 patients, each patient providing PB-18 times and BM-11 times respectively throughout the two-year treatment regimen, by triple colour flow-cytometric analysis for the detection of MRD, using the same template for an individual.
The present study reports (i) high expression of OAcSGP along with B-(CD10+CD19+ or CD19+CD34+) or T-(CD7+CD3+) lineage-specific CD markers in paired samples of PB and BM from individual patients at the onset of the disease which decreases during clinical remission (CR), (ii) detection level of MRD to be 1 in 104 lymphocytes, (iii) failure in early clearance of these lymphoblasts during the initial few weeks of treatment can be a bad prognosis, associated with high risk of relapse during maintenance, (iv) high MRD few weeks prior to clinical relapse, (v) a good correlation between the MRD in PB and BM in both B- and T-ALL during treatment. Thus, we propose that MRD detection technique used in this study may be beneficial for the long term monitoring of the disease status of these children and for modifying the intensification of chemotherapy accordingly.
Discussion
Immunophenotype, ploidy, chromosomal abnormalities, gene rearrangements and clinical parameters are extensively used for treatment stratification, but none of these prognostic factors is totally accurate. Flow cytometry, however, has the potential for accurate quantification of MRD [
30‐
37]. Although several strategies have been adopted for treatment in childhood cancer [
38], interest in the use of biomarkers to evaluate the clinical status of the patient and the future risk or relapse still remains a challenge. Assessment of the
O-acetylated sialoglycan profile is a relatively unexplored domain in leukaemia sialobiology where the amplified expression of
OAcSGP has been established as a vital ALL-associated determinant [
3,
15,
19,
20,
25].
According to existing literature, the rate of post-chemotherapy (after two-years of therapy under MCP841 protocol) relapse rate is very high in India [
2]. About 70% of all relapses occur within four years from the start of therapy. Due to the socio-economic scenario in India, a large number of children, especially from weaker section of society, expire because of the adverse effect of the lethal doses of chemotherapy or due to the inability to bear the expenses of treatment. Our aim was to design a MRD template that would successfully unveil the disease status of these patients, both in PB and BM during the treatment regimen and correlate with the clinical symptom in a two-year longitudinal follow-up study by flow cytometry. The over expression of
OAcSGP on lymphoblasts, irrespective of their lineage, at onset of the disease, makes it a universal marker for paediatric ALL [
15]. Therefore, we have explored its differential expression along with other lineage-specific antigens and have established the competence of the triple colour over single and double colour template for monitoring MRD in these children.
The current investigation demonstrates the potential of the designed templates OAcSGP+CD10+CD19+ or OAcSGP+CD34+CD19+ or OAcSGP+CD7+CD3+ for successful diagnosis and evaluation of the disease status during the two-year chemotherapy, suggesting its application in MRD detection and prediction of impending relapse in ALL both in PB and BM. The level of MRD detection is 0.01% i.e., 1 cancerous cell in 104 lymphocytes can be detected using the above mentioned templates Failure in early clearance of these lymphoblasts during the initial few weeks of treatment (till the end of induction 1) showed high risk of relapse within the two-year treatment phase. The relapse can be forecasted few weeks prior to clinical relapse by periodic monitoring of these patients, even in PB. The MRD detection in BM correlated well with PB in both B- and T-ALL.
Augmented expression of
OAcSGP at diagnosis and its subsequent decrease during the treatment phase, irrespective of the lineage, triggered us to use it as an indicator for MRD detection in childhood ALL. Using
OAcSGP as the only marker to monitor MRD could not improve the sensitivity of detection below 5% as corroborated by our earlier observation [
15]. Moreover, 5–10% of MNCs from normal donor also expressed
OAcSGP on their surface, though with minimum the antigen density (MFI = 10–50 au). Therefore, an ALL-specific template was required for successful MRD detection. Two-colour flow-cytometric study enabled the sensitivity to increase only up to 0.1% [
20]. This phenomenon has also been highlighted in Table
2, where in spite of a 100% specificity, indicating zero cross-reactivity, the single or dual marker method of MRD detection could not be used. This paved the path for the three-colour flow-cytometric study for further increasing the sensitivity of MRD detection using Achatinin-H along with two other lineage-specific markers for B/T-ALL where detection level was 0.01%.
Table 2
Sensitivity and specificity of the templates used for the detection of MRD in children with ALL
OAcSGP | 100 | 100 | Till 5% |
CD19 | 84.27 | 100 | |
CD10 | 58.43 | 100 | |
CD34 | 25.8 | 100 | |
CD3 | 15.7 | 100 | |
CD7 | 15.7 | 100 | |
OAcSGP, CD19 | 84.27 | 100 | Till 0.1% |
OAcSGP, CD10 | 58.43 | 100 | |
OAcSGP, CD34 | 25.8 | 100 | |
OAcSGP, CD3 | 15.7 | 100 | |
OAcSGP, CD7 | 15.7 | 100 | |
CD19, CD10 | 58.43 | 100 | |
CD19, CD34 | 25.8 | 100 | |
CD3, CD7 | 15.7 | 100 | |
OAcSGP, CD10, CD19 | 58.43 | 100 | Till 0.01% |
OAcSGP, CD34, CD19 | 25.8 | 100 | |
OAcSGP, CD7, CD3 | 15.7 | 100 | |
For the MRD detection, emphasis has been given on the inclusion of only those CD markers whose expressions were upregulated at the onset of the disease. Therefore, in addition to
OAcSGP, we have taken into consideration two other lineage-specific markers, templates being
OAcSGP
+CD10
+CD19
+,
OAcSGP
+CD34
+CD19
+ or
OAcSGP
+CD7
+CD3
+, the former two for the MRD detection in B-ALL and the latter for T-ALL. CD34 was included in the template only for those patients who had a low percentage (5–8%) of CD10
+ cells at diagnosis. The detection level of MRD thus improved to 0.01% (Figure
2, Table
1). This observation was also demonstrated by the admixed experiment (Figure
7a, b) in which we could unequivocally detect the leukaemia-derived signals in dilutions containing at least two leukemic cells in 10
4 normal cells (r
2 = 0.99), thereby suggesting the proficiency of the templates.
The threshold of percent positive cells was used for MRD detection. Cells positive for all the three antigens viz.,
OAcSGP
+CD10
+CD19
+ or
OAcSGP
+CD34
+CD19 or
OAcSGP
+CD7
+CD3
+ (as defined by the R3 gating) were considered to be the MRD present in the patient. The MRD in normal donor and in patients with other haematological diseases was absent (Figure
3) and therefore this was used as negative control for all subsequent MRD analysis of children with ALL. Patients at diagnosis were tested for the presence of the same phenotype of cells for comparison as positive control. Using these standards for evaluation, the ALL patients in CR have an average MRD of 0.03 ± 0.01% (PB) and 0.05 ± 0.015% (BM), irrespective of their lineage, suggesting superior prognosis as substantiated by clinical data (Table
1). Out of the total 109 patients studied during this two-year longitudinal follow-up study, 81.65% were in CR throughout the chemotherapeutic regimen. As because MRD detection using these templates could be done in no other haematological malignancy except ALL, therefore, the aforesaid templates can be considered to be ALL-specific.
Clinical relapse was encountered in 16 patients during the maintenance phase of treatment. Two groups of patients highly susceptible to relapse could be identified from this study population. The first cluster of such high-risk patients had high MRD during induction 1, in both PB and BM, with a consequent clinical relapse during 48–76
th week of treatment i.e., between second and fourth maintenance. Therefore, presence of MRD beyond the average range during induction 1 has great prognostic significance predicting relapse during maintenance therapy. 8.26% patients of the total patient population showed this trend; however, only 5.5% relapsed as predicted. Four of these patients attained CR during 5
th and 6
th maintenance while two of them died (Figure
5). The fact that three patients were in CR in spite of their high MRD within the first five weeks of treatment was probably due to their better response to chemotherapy compared to their counterparts coming across relapse. As the patients are monitored less frequently during maintenance therapy, once in three months, the majority of the relapses during this period can be accounted for. The other group of patients at risk of relapse exhibited high MRD few weeks prior to clinical relapse (Figure
6). They had average MRD during the first 20 weeks of treatment, which increased after this period terminating in a clinical relapse. In this group of patients, the trend was seen in 10.09% out of which 9.17% relapsed. 8 of these patients went into CR while two of them died post relapse. Therefore, close monitoring of children during the treatment will help in modifying the intensification of the treatment. This observation has been supported by earlier information on MRD, in which monitoring patients during the first three months of treatment is able to distinguish patients with good prognosis from those with poor prognosis [
30].
In general, as the normal counterparts of T-lineage ALL cells are immature T cells, which are confined to the thymus, detection of MRD simply consists of the identification of immature T cells outside the thymus, i.e. in the BM or in the PB. In contrast, the normal counterparts of B-ALL reside in BM, referred to as 'haematogones'. They are actively proliferating after chemotherapy or transplantation in BM, and can also be found in low proportions in PB [
32]. Therefore the strategy for MRD detection in B-ALL is less straightforward than T-ALL. The use of PB for the detection of MRD is debatable because subtle leukaemia-associated deregulation of gene expression extends to many other molecules normally expressed during B-cell differentiation [
33,
34]. However two studies [
35,
36] have shown that paired MRD values in BM and PB are highly concordant in T-ALL. Conversely, large differences frequently occur in B-ALL, where levels are higher in BM than that of PB. Interestingly, we could detect MRD in both PB and BM not only in CR but also for predicting impending relapses. In the category of patients, failing to clear lymphoblasts during the first induction of chemotherapy, MRD in PB was very high between 1–6 weeks, corroborated by higher MRD in BM on 6
th week (Figure
5). Accordingly at the time of relapse, very high MRD could be detected in PB as well as BM. Similarly in the second high-risk group of patients, elevation in MRD few weeks prior to relapse occurred irrespective of PB and BM (Figure
6). In all the aforesaid comparisons although the MRD in PB is significantly less than that in BM (p value < 0.0001), the interesting piece of information that can be retrieved is that MRD in BM is being reflected in PB. As comparable MRD can be detected even in PB, the strenuous process of BM aspiration may be evaded.
In this investigation, each patient has been monitored 29 times (PB-18 times and BM-11 times) throughout the two-year tenure of treatment under MCP841. As the samples were obtained as per the MCP841 protocol, for clinical investigation, we have utilized the opportunity to use them for the MRD assay for standardization of our template. Although monitoring a patient so frequently is difficult and expensive for a third world country like India, such an elaborate monitoring may not be needed. Minute quantity of lectin (0.04 μg/μl per test) used for the assay, being 1.2 μg for a patient in two years offers a cheaper source of diagnostic approach.
Competing interests
The author(s) declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors' contributions
All authors read and approved the final manuscript. Suchandra Chowdhury carried out the standardization of the assays, processing of all the samples throughout the study, preparation of tables, graphs and draft of the Manuscript. Dr. Suman Bandyopadhyay performed the initial standardization of templates. Chandan Mandal maintained a record of all the clinical samples and also helped in processing samples. Dr. Sarmila Chandra provided the clinical samples and the history of the patients. Dr. Chitra Mandal, being the main project investigator participated in the supervision of the entire work, preparation of manuscript and gave final approval of the version to be published.