Haematologica Reports 2005; 1(issue 2): 5-8 [prev][index][next]
?Evaluation of minimal residual disease in chronic
lymphocytic leukemia
?Matthias Ritgen, Sebastian
Böttcher, Peter Dreger, Michael Kneba
?Medizinische Klinik II in Städtischen Klinikum Kiel , Kiel,
Germany
?Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is a malignancy with a
variable prognosis. Poor-risk cases are characterized by advanced
clinical stage, short lymphocyte doubling time, unmutated
immunoglobulin heavy gene (IgVH) status, distinct genomic
aberrations, ZAP70 and CD38 expression and elevated serum thymidine
kinase levels. During the last decade, effective chemotherapy
combinations have been developed, making high complete remission
rates in this disease feasible. However, after conventional
chemotherapy and autologous stem cell transplantation (SCT), all
patients will eventually relapse. Nevertheless, time to progression
is highly variable in patients who achieve complete clinical
remissions. Therefore, minimal residual disease (MRD) undetectable
by clinical means must have been present in all of these cases.
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