Melphalan-mobilized blood stem cell components contain minimal clonotypic myeloma cell contamination

Ping Zhou, Yana Zhang, Carmen Martinez, Nagesh Kalakonda, Stephen D Nimer, Raymond L Comenzo, Ping Zhou, Yana Zhang, Carmen Martinez, Nagesh Kalakonda, Stephen D Nimer, Raymond L Comenzo

Abstract

Optimal methods of stem cell mobilization in multiple myeloma are undefined, and contaminating clonotypic cells could contribute to disease recurrence. A phase 2 trial of intravenous melphalan (60 mg/m2) and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) (10 microg/kg/d) for mobilization was performed. To enhance reliability, contamination was assessed with 2 sensitive methods, immunoglobulin light and heavy chain variable region patient-specific limiting-dilution polymerase chain reaction (PCR). We evaluated 29 stem cell components (SCCs) from 15 patients; for 9 SCCs, only VL PCR was used because of light chain disease or technical problems with VH primers. For 20 SCCs, VL and VH PCR results were highly correlated (r2 = 0.93, P <.01), with 35% (7 of 20) having identical estimates. VH PCR gave significantly higher estimates for 8-and VL PCR for 5-SCCs, supporting the utility of using 2 methods. Estimated clonotypic contamination per SCC was 0.0009% (range, 0%-0.1%) or 0.5 x 10(4) clonotypic cells per kilogram (range, 0-41.2 x 10(4)/kg), and contamination correlated with CD34+ cells collected (r2 = 0.42, P <.01). Melphalan-mobilized SCCs contain minimal clonotypic contamination.

Source: PubMed

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