Objective: To investigate the effect of real-time quantitative reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) approach in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) for detecting the minimal residual disease (MRD) or monitoring the treatment response and predicting the prognosis.
Methods: Fifty-six CML patients, 39 males and 17 females, aged 39 (16 approximately 66), with disease history and frozen RNA specimens were studied, 31 of which were in the incipient chronic phase, 7 in the accelerated phase, and 17 in the rapidly progressing phase. Three or more frozen RNA specimens collected before and after treatment were preserved in 11 of the patients. Breakpoint cluster region-Abelson murine leukemia viral oncogene (BCR-ABL) of the patients in different CML stages was analyzed by RT-PCR approach.
Results: The BCR-ABL transcript of those patients remaining in chronic period after treatment decreased to 1/3 that of the baseline level six months after the initiation of treatment and then remained at that level. The BCR-ABL transcript of those in which progressing change occurred increased when such change occurred. After allogeneic transplantation of peripheral blood stem cells the BCR-ABL level decreased significantly. The median DoseN in the 17 progressing patients was 10 492, significantly higher than those of the 31 patients in chronic phase (5920) and in the 7 patients in accelerated phase (4444, both P < 0.05). The minimal residual disease and the treatment response were closely associated with the level and its variation of BCR-ABL transcripts, the transcripts level in blastic crisis was significantly higher than that in chronic phase or accelerated phase.
Conclusion: Real-time quantitative RT-PCR is reliable and can be used to detect the minimal residual disease, monitor the treatment outcome, and predicting blastic crisis.