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The expression of multiple cancer/testis antigens can potentially be used to detect circulating disease and clonal evolution in the peripheral blood of multiple myeloma patients

Karen Shires, Teagan Van Wyk, Kirsty Wienand

2021Blood Research10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: It is thought that cancer/testis antigens (CTAs) are expressed in a cascade-like manner in multiple myeloma as the disease progresses. In this pilot study, we investigated the co-expression of several CTAs in the peripheral blood (PB) during patient therapy to establish whether monitoring multiple CTAs allows for the prediction of relapse and clonal evolution. METHODS: via quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) duplex assays in the PB mononuclear cells of 10 patients on chemotherapy at 3-month intervals, and correlated the levels to those of two basic clinical monitoring markers, serum -2-microglobulin and serum M protein. Clonal evolution was investigated using flow cytometry to label the circulating malignant stem cell components with MAGEC1, PRAME, and MAGEA3 antibodies. RESULTS: -monitoring panel allowed for better classification of the relapse event (clonal evolution), which in turn could potentially guide treatment strategies in the future. CONCLUSION: This pilot study supports the novel idea of determining the levels and CTA expression patterns of the total circulating malignant cell population (pro-B/pre-B stem cell progenitors and proliferating plasma cells) as an alternate disease monitoring methodology.

Topics & Concepts

PopulationImmunologyMultiple myelomaMedicineProgenitor cellAntigenCancer researchSomatic evolution in cancerOncologyCancerBiologyStem cellInternal medicineGeneticsEnvironmental healthImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesMultiple Myeloma Research and Treatmentsvaccines and immunoinformatics approaches
The expression of multiple cancer/testis antigens can potentially be used to detect circulating disease and clonal evolution in the peripheral blood of multiple myeloma patients | Litcius