Chronic Myeloid Leukemia |
III. Medizinische Klinik, Medizinische Fakultät Mannheim der Universität Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany
Correspondence: Andreas Hochhaus, III. Medizinische Klinik, Medizinische, Fakultät Mannheim der Universität, Heidelberg, Theodor-Kutzer-Ufer 1-3, 68167 Mannheim, Germany. E-mail: hochhaus{at}uni-hd.de
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Design and Methods: Ninety-five patients who relapsed during imatinib therapy were screened for BCR-ABL kinase domain mutations using sensitive denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography (D-HPLC) and direct sequencing. To investigate the dynamics of mutated clones D-HPLC was applied to 453 cDNA samples tracking back from relapse towards the start of imatinib therapy.
Results: Twenty-two different point mutations affecting 18 amino acids were detectable in 46/79 (58%) and in 7/16 patients (44%) with hematologic or cytogenetic relapse, respectively. A deletion of 81 nucleotides (del248-274) of ABL exon 4 was observed in two patients. Three patients had exclusively single nucleotide polymorphisms (K247R, T315T, E499E, n=1 each) within the BCR-ABL kinase domain. In patients harboring mutations, hematologic relapse occurred after a median of 12.9 months (range, 0.9–44.2), and BCR-ABL mutations first became detectable at a median of 5.8 months (range, 0–30.5) after starting imatinib therapy (p<0.0001). Nine patients showed evidence of BCR-ABL mutations prior to imatinib therapy (T315I, n=4; M351T, n=3; M244V and Y253H, n=1 each).
Conclusions: We conclude that: (i) D-HPLC is a sensitive method for screening for BCR-ABL mutations before and during therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors; (ii) the occurrence of BCR-ABL mutations during imatinib therapy is predictive of relapse; (iii) mutations may be detectable several months before relapse, and (iv) the sensitive detection of small numbers of mutated clones could provide clinical benefit by triggering early therapeutic interventions.
Key words: chronic myeloid leukemia, imatinib resistance, BCR-ABL mutation, D-HPLC.
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Early detection of BCR-ABL mutants may identify patients who are likely to become resistant to imatinib therapy, which in turn would allow optimization of treatment of these high-risk patients with, for example, dose escalation, combination therapy or administration of novel second generation tyrosine kinase inhibitors.3 However, there is currently no consensus on which technique should be used for mutation analysis screening of the BCR-ABL kinase domain of imatinib-resistant CML patients. Mutations can be reliably and sensitively detected by selection and expansion of specific clones followed by DNA sequencing.4,5 This procedure is, however, cumbersome and not suitable for routine clinical analysis. Alternatively, sequencing of nested polymerase-chain reaction (PCR)-amplified BCR-ABL products has been widely used to search for known and unknown BCR-ABL kinase domain mutations.6,7 A major drawback of direct sequencing is that its sensitivity for detecting mutations is only 10–20%. Improved sensitivities of 1–5% could be obtained by pyrosequencing,8 double-gradient denaturing electrophoresis9 or mass array genotyping.10 More sensitive methods include peptide nucleic acid based PCR clamping11 and allele-specific oligonucleotide (ASO) PCR.12–14 These techniques are, however, specific and cannot be applied for screening for unknown mutations.
Denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography (D-HPLC) has been described as a highly sensitive screening method for the detection of BCR-ABL kinase domain mutations, even when the site of the mutation is unknown.15–17 We sought to employ D-HPLC as a diagnostic method for mutation screening covering the complete BCR-ABL kinase domain and to analyze, retrospectively, the dynamics of mutated clones in CML patients who experienced hematologic or cytogenetic relapse.
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Table 1. Patients characteristics.
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D-HPLC analysis
The entire ABL kinase domain (exons 4 to 10) of the rearranged BCR-ABL allele was amplified using a nested PCR. The first round of amplification (ABL-A) was performed using a forward primer mapping to BCR exon b2 (5'-ACAGCATTCCGCTGACCATCAATAAG-3') or e1 (5'-ACCGCATGTTCCGGGACAAAAG-3'). The common reverse primer (5'-ATGGTCCAGAGGATCGCT-CTCT-3') annealed at the junction of ABL exons 10 and 11. The size of the ABL-A fragment depends on the respective BCR-ABL transcript of the patient (range 1643–1814 bp). In the second round of amplification the coding sequence of the ABL kinase domain was divided into three partially overlapping fragments, ABL-B (codons 207-324, 401 bp), ABL-C (codons 279-414, 457 bp) and ABL-D (codons 382-517, 453 bp). The following primers were used: ABL-B-for: 5'-TGGTTCATCATCATTCAACGGTGG-3'; ABL-B-rev: 5'-GTTGCACTCCCTCAGGTAGTC-3'; ABL-C-for: 5'-AAGACCTTGAAGGAGGACACCAT-3'; ABL-C-rev: 5'-AGACGTCGGACTTGATGGAGAACT-3'; ABL-D-for: 5'-ACCACTTGGTGAAGGTAGCTG-3'; ABL-D-rev: 5'-CCTGCAGCAAGGTACTCACA-3'. All PCR reactions were performed in a final volume of 50 µL containing 1 µL of cDNA sample, 1x reaction buffer, 1.5 mM MgSO4, 200 µM dNTP, 0.4 µM each of forward and reverse primers and 1.25 U of OptimaseTM polymerase (TransgenomicTM, Omaha, NE, USA). Conditions for the first step were as follows: 2 min of denaturation at 95°C followed by a touch-down protocol of 14 cycles of 30 sec at 95°C, 30 sec at 67°C (decrease of 0.5°C per cycle), 3 min at 72°C, and 19 cycles of 30 sec at 95°C, 30 sec at 60°C, and 3 min at 72°C with a final extension for 5 min at 72°C. The second step was performed under the same PCR conditions except for a shorter extension time of 1 min at 72°C and amplification of the first-step PCR product.
PCR products were analyzed by D-HPLC on a Transgenomic WaveTM System Model 3500HT (TransgenomicTM, Omaha, NE, USA). Optimal conditions for the resolution of heteroduplexes were calculated using NavigatorTM software, version 1.6.0 (TransgenomicTM, Omaha, NE, USA). Growth factor-independent BaF3 cell populations20 expressing full-length non-mutated BCR-ABL or full-length BCR-ABL with the most clinically common BCR-ABL kinase domain mutations, Y253F, E255K, T315I and M351T, were used to optimize the D-HPLC assay and to estimate the sensitivity. Using serial dilutions the detection limit for the T315I and M351T mutations was estimated to be 0.1%, whereas that for the Y253F and E255K mutations was 0.5% and 1%, respectively (Figure 1). The detection limit by direct sequencing was ~10%. We also compared the D-HPLC sensitivity of our nested PCR method for BCR-ABL kinase domain amplifications with a single-step PCR method (in which ABL-A was not amplified). D-HPLC analysis of single-step PCR products showed a detection limit when samples contained less than 30% mutated cells. Highly sensitive detection of BCR-ABL kinase mutations by D-HPLC requires a nested PCR approach in which the translocated ABL allele is specifically analyzed.
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Figure 1. Sensitivity of the D-HPLC assay compared to that of direct sequencing. T315I mutant BaF3T315I and non-mutated BaF3BCR-ABL cell lines were mixed together to contain from 100% to 0% mutant cells and analyzed by D-HPLC (left panel) and direct sequencing (right panel). D-HPLC was optimized to detect 0.1% BaF3T315I in a background of normal BaF3BCR-ABL cells. The degree of difference (marked by arrows) varied from an obvious heteroduplex peak to a slight shouldering of the homoduplex peak depending on the amount of mutant clones. Since mutation detection by D-HPLC depends upon the formation of heteroduplexes between wild-type and mutant sequence strands, no mutation was apparent when the sample comprised 100% mutant alleles. By direct sequencing the mutation was detectable only when the sample comprised ~10% mutant cells. The nucleotide change of interest is marked by asterisks.
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Statistical analysis
For statistical analyses, Wilcoxons matched pairs test was performed using a two-tailed distribution and confidence intervals of 95% (GraphPad PrismTM Version 5.0 software, San Diego, CA, USA).
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Table 2. Mutations and polymorphisms of the BCR-ABL kinase domain detected at the time of relapse.
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Figure 2. (A) Median time to hematologic relapse after the commencement of imatinib treatment compared with median time to mutation detection by D-HPLC. D-HPLC enables detection of mutations significantly (p<0.0001) earlier than hematologic relapse. Nine patients showed evidence of BCR-ABL mutations even prior to imatinib therapy. (B) The median time to cytogenetic relapse after the commencement of imatinib treatment compared with median time to mutation detection by D-HPLC. D-HPLC also enables detection of mutations prior to cytogenetic relapse (p=0.031). In two patients BCR-ABL mutations were observed before imatinib therapy was started.
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Figure 3. Intervals between D-HPLC positivity and subsequent hematologic relapse. (A) Grouped according to the phase of disease: D-HPLC analysis enables mutation detection several months prior to hematologic relapse in CML patients in all phases of disease. (B) Grouped according to the site of the mutation: Time from first detection of mutation to hematologic relapse was longer in patients harboring mutations associated with minor changes of the IC50 to imatinib (e.g., M351T; 3.4-fold increase of IC50, median interval of 10.8 months).
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Table 3. Results grouped according to phase of disease and mutation location.
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Mutation analysis of patients with continuous complete cytogenetic remission
Samples from 25 CML patients with continuous complete cytogenetic remission for more than 2 years after imatinib monotherapy were screened for baseline BCR-ABL mutations. Three samples showed a heterozygous D-HPLC elution profile and subsequent direct sequencing confirmed the nucleotide change 70846 c-t (GenBank accession # U07563), which leads to the silent Y413Y mutation (n=1), and 74901 a-g, which leads to the E499E polymorphism (n=2) as confirmed by selective sequencing of the normal ABL allele. No mutations associated with imatinib resistance were found.
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There is currently no accepted consensus on when patients should be screened and which technique should be used for analysis of BCR-ABL kinase domain mutations. Expert recommendations suggest that mutations should be identified as early as possible because they may indicate the need to reconsider the therapeutic strategy.25 However, the prognostic impact of early detection of an imminently resistant clone remains to be determined. Since low levels of mutant clones may not necessarily have the same clinical significance as clones that are detected in the context of rising disease burden,8,14 more sensitive methods, e.g. allele-specific PCR, are probably too sensitive. It is not yet possible to predict imminent disease progression accurately. A more than 2-fold increase of BCR-ABL transcripts was suggested to be an indicator for predicting mutations,26 but other investigators found that this was only a poor predictor.27 Irrespective of that, since the level of transcripts may rise relatively late in the emergence of a mutant clone, reliance on rising transcript levels may delay mutation detection in comparison to that possible by using sensitive mutation screening techniques.27 With regard to our results, we suggest that D-HPLC-based screening is a suitable method for routine analysis of BCR-ABL mutations. Three-monthly, sensitive mutation analysis seems to be sufficient for predicting disease progression due to mutations several months prior to relapse in patients with suboptimal response according to the current guidelines.1
The significance of harboring multiple mutated clones has not been established so far. In this cohort, the second mutation appeared a median of 6.4 months after the first mutation. Since patients relapsed at a median of 2.2 months after detection of the second mutation, the finding of multiple resistant clones could be important. In our small cohort of patients with multiple mutations (n=5), the secondary mutation had (except for one patient initially harboring T315I and later, additionally, M244V) a higher IC50 than the primary mutation, indicating that the selective pressure from imatinib may facilitate outgrowth of more resistant clones subsequent to less resistant clones. In order to determine the predictive value of minor clones harboring mutations for consecutive relapses, we screened baseline samples from chronic phase CML patients in complete cytogenetic remission for more than 2 years under ongoing imatinib therapy. No BCR-ABL mutations associated with imatinib resistance were found. Thus, the observation of mutations during imatinib therapy seems to be predictive of imminent relapse. In contrast, Chu et al. detected BCR-ABL kinase mutations in purified CD34+ cells from five of 13 CML patients (38%) in complete cytogenetic remission.28 Although most of the mutations seen have not been reported in previous clinical studies, two of five patients harboring mutations have relapsed. Others found that mutations in patients in stable complete cytogenetic remission are infrequent, and their detection does not consistently predict relapse.29
Another aim of our study was to optimize the D-HPLC method as a diagnostic tool for highly sensitive mutation screening of the entire BCR-ABL kinase domain. Using nested PCR for the exclusive amplification of the rearranged ABL allele, D-HPLC allowed the detection of minor clones harboring BCR-ABL mutations at a level of 0.1–1%. Our D-HPLC assay, which consists of three overlapping ABL-fragments, allows an estimation of the site of the mutation, even without sequencing. PCR products harboring the mutation can be enriched by a fragment collector allowing consecutive sequencing (not performed in this study). However, high-sensitivity mutation screening of CML patients prior to therapy is not, to date, recommended for routine monitoring.25
In conclusion, sensitive mutation analysis allowed detection of small mutated clones several months prior to hematologic or cytogenetic relapse. We suggest this optimized D-HPLC method as a suitable tool for screening analysis of BCR-ABL mutations in CML patients prior to, or during therapy with tyrosine kinase inhibitors. The appearance of BCR-ABL mutations during, imatinib therapy seems to indicate imminent relapse. Detection of BCR-ABL mutations as soon as possible could provide clinical benefit for CML patients by leading too early reconsideration of therapeutic strategies.
TE: performed the experiments, analyzed the data and wrote the manuscript; PE, MCM, PP, TS, JH, SK, PLR: contributed to the design of the study, to the work and to the interpretation of results; RH: supervised the study, revised the manuscript; AH: designed the study, wrote the manuscript. The authors reported no potential conflicts of interest.
Funding: the study was supported by the German José-Carreras-Foundation e.V., the Competence Network Acute and chronic leukemias, sponsored by the German Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (Projektträger Gesundheitsforschung; DLR e.V.- 01 GI9980/6) and the European LeukemiaNet within the 6th European Community Framework Program for Research and Technological Development.
Received for publication July 17, 2007. Accepted for publication November 13, 2007.
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