Chimerism test was evaluated to predict leukemia relapse. Increasing mixed chimerism (IMC), defined as recipient increase ≥0.1% in peripheral blood total cell chimerism, was used as a surrogate of disease activity. Combination of quantitative PCR and short-tandem repeat method was applied to achieve high assay sensitivity. Total of 184 patients received stem cell transplant for acute myeloid leukemia (N = 110), acute lymphocytic leukemia (N = 41), myelodysplastic syndrome (N = 30), and 2389 chimerism tests (median follow-up, 1054 days). Sixty-six patients relapsed, and 118 patients did not. Cumulative incidence of relapse increased after 1 IMC or ≥2 consecutive IMCs (hazard ratios, 9.9 and 44.4, respectively). Predicted percentage relapse by day 30 after IMC was 0% (0 IMC), 10% (1 IMC), and 40% (≥2 IMCs). The last chimerism results before relapse detected IMC in 57 of 66 relapsed patients (sensitivity, 86.4%). Nine patients had no IMC before relapse (false negative) because of rapidly evolving relapse (N = 4) or extramural relapse (N = 5). In 118 patients without relapse, 158 of 1873 tests detected IMC (false positive, 8.4%; specificity, 91.6%). The false-positive rates increased with higher percentage recipient T-cell chimerism levels, indicating T-cell contamination as a cause. Chimerism monitoring predicts relapse. However, caution must be taken for false-positive or false-negative IMCs. T-cell removal can improve chimerism test specificity in patients with mixed T-cell chimerism.
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