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  • Early T precursor acute lymphoblastic leukaemia/lymphoma shows differential immunophenotypic characteristics including frequent CD33 expression and in vitro response to targeted CD33 therapy.

Early T precursor acute lymphoblastic leukaemia/lymphoma shows differential immunophenotypic characteristics including frequent CD33 expression and in vitro response to targeted CD33 therapy.

British journal of haematology (2019-05-23)
Haitham Khogeer, Haitham Rahman, Nitin Jain, Evgeniya A Angelova, Hong Yang, Andres Quesada, Chi Y Ok, Dawen Sui, Peng Wei, Areej Al Fattani, Sherry Pierce, Sanam Loghavi, Audrey Lamb, Peter Hu, Beenu Thakral, Rashmi Kanagal-Shamanna, Jeffrey L Jorgensen, Elias J Jabbour, Hagop M Kantarjian, L Jeffrey Medeiros, Joseph D Khoury
ABSTRACT

The differential immunophenotypic characteristics of early T precursor (ETP) acute lymphoblastic leukaemia/lymphoma (ALL) remain incompletely characterized. The study group (n = 142) included 106 (74·7%) men and 36 (25·3%) women with a median age of 34·9 years (range, 2-79) at diagnosis. Patients were subtyped by flow cytometry immunophenotyping as follows: 33 (23·2%) ETP; 32 (22·5%) early non-ETP; 60 (42·2%) thymic; and 17 (12·1%) mature. Excepting definitional markers, there was a significant differential expression of the markers CD2, CD10, CD33 and TdT between ETP-ALL and non-ETP-ALL. Positive CD33 expression (≥20% of leukaemic blasts) was detected in 21/33 (63%) ETP-ALL compared with 17/95 (17·9%) non-ETP-ALL (P < 0·001). Notably, targeted anti-CD33 therapy with IMGN779 resulted in significant growth inhibition and increased apoptosis in ETP-ALL cells in vitro. An 11-marker T-ALL immunophenotype score discriminated reliably between ETP and non-ETP ALL. Longitudinal analysis of ETP-ALL cases in this study demonstrated that the immunophenotype may be occasionally dynamic but is largely stable over the disease course. In summary, identification of ETP-ALL might be enhanced by using an 11-marker T-ALL immunophenotype score. CD33 expression is frequent in ETP-ALL, and in vitro data suggest that exploring anti-CD33 therapy in ETP-ALL is warranted.