In acute lymphoblastic leukemia, flow cytometry detects more accurately leukemic cells in patients' cerebrospinal fluid compared to conventional cytology. However, the clinical significance of flow cytometry positivity with a negative cytology - occult central nervous system disease - is not clear. In the framework of the national Campus ALL program, we retrospectively evaluated the incidence of occult central nervous system disease and its impact on outcome in 240 adult patients with newly diagnosed acute lymphoblastic leukemia. All cerebrospinal fluid samples were investigated by conventional cytology and flow cytometry. The presence of ≥10 phenotypically abnormal events, forming a cluster, was considered as flow cytometry positivity. No central nervous system involvement was documented in 179 patients, while 18 were positive by conventional morphology and 43 were occult central nervous system disease positive. The relapse rate was significantly lower in central nervous system disease negative patients and the disease-free and overall survival were significantly longer in central nervous system disease negative patients than in those with manifest or occult central nervous system disease positive. In multivariate analysis, the status of manifest and occult central nervous system disease positivity was independently associated with a worse overall survival. In conclusion, we demonstrate that in adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients at diagnosis flow cytometry can detect occult central nervous system disease at high sensitivity and that the status of occult central nervous system disease positivity is associated with an adverse outcome. (Clinicaltrials.gov NCT03803670).

Del Principe, M.i., Buzzatti, E., Piciocchi, A., Forghieri, F., Bonifacio, M., Lessi, F., et al. (2021). Clinical significance of occult central nervous system disease in adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia. A multicenter report from the campus all network. HAEMATOLOGICA, 106, 39-45 [10.3324/haematol.2019.231704].

Clinical significance of occult central nervous system disease in adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia. A multicenter report from the campus all network

Del Principe, Maria Ilaria
;
Neri, Benedetta;Cefalo, Mariagiovanna;Irno-Consalvo, Maria Antonietta;Venditti, Adriano;
2021-01-01

Abstract

In acute lymphoblastic leukemia, flow cytometry detects more accurately leukemic cells in patients' cerebrospinal fluid compared to conventional cytology. However, the clinical significance of flow cytometry positivity with a negative cytology - occult central nervous system disease - is not clear. In the framework of the national Campus ALL program, we retrospectively evaluated the incidence of occult central nervous system disease and its impact on outcome in 240 adult patients with newly diagnosed acute lymphoblastic leukemia. All cerebrospinal fluid samples were investigated by conventional cytology and flow cytometry. The presence of ≥10 phenotypically abnormal events, forming a cluster, was considered as flow cytometry positivity. No central nervous system involvement was documented in 179 patients, while 18 were positive by conventional morphology and 43 were occult central nervous system disease positive. The relapse rate was significantly lower in central nervous system disease negative patients and the disease-free and overall survival were significantly longer in central nervous system disease negative patients than in those with manifest or occult central nervous system disease positive. In multivariate analysis, the status of manifest and occult central nervous system disease positivity was independently associated with a worse overall survival. In conclusion, we demonstrate that in adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients at diagnosis flow cytometry can detect occult central nervous system disease at high sensitivity and that the status of occult central nervous system disease positivity is associated with an adverse outcome. (Clinicaltrials.gov NCT03803670).
2021
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore MED/15 - MALATTIE DEL SANGUE
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
Adult Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia; central nervous system; conventional cytology; flow cytometry; prognosis
Del Principe, M.i., Buzzatti, E., Piciocchi, A., Forghieri, F., Bonifacio, M., Lessi, F., et al. (2021). Clinical significance of occult central nervous system disease in adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia. A multicenter report from the campus all network. HAEMATOLOGICA, 106, 39-45 [10.3324/haematol.2019.231704].
Del Principe, Mi; Buzzatti, E; Piciocchi, A; Forghieri, F; Bonifacio, M; Lessi, F; Imbergamo, S; Orciuolo, E; Rossi, G; Fracchiolla, N; Trappolini, S; Neri, B; Sarlo, C; Zappasodi, P; Dargenio, M; Cefalo, M; Irno-Consalvo, Ma; Conti, C; Paterno, G; De Angelis, G; Sciumè, M; Della Starza, I; Venditti, A; Foà, R; Guarini, Ar
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/226366
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