AI Article Synopsis

  • There is ongoing debate about the effectiveness of clonal diagnosis methods for lymphoproliferative disorders, leading researchers to investigate gene scanning as a potential solution.
  • In a study involving various patient groups (including ALL, NHL, and CLL), gene scanning successfully identified monoclonality in a significant percentage of cases, demonstrating its potential as an effective diagnostic tool.
  • The findings indicated that gene scanning has a high sensitivity and positive predictive value, making it a promising method for detecting malignant clones in lymphoproliferative disorders.

Article Abstract

There remains significant controversy over the techniques used for clonal diagnosis of lymphoproliferative disorders because of questions regarding the sensitivity, specificity and throughput. This has stimulated us to explore the use of gene scan to determine clonality of Immunoglobulin (Ig)/T-cell receptor (TCR) (gamma gene rearrangement in a variety of morphologically, cytochemically, pathologically and immunophenotypically defined precursor B/T-ALL (12 patients), 5 patients with NHL, 10 patients with CLL and a group of reactive lymphocytosis as a reference group (10 subjects). Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was done for IgH gene (FR3a, FR2b, LJH and JH primers) and for TCR gamma gene and the malignant clone was identified using gene scan (GS) analysis. In the ALL group, monoclonality was detected using GS and using IgH (FR2b) 75% had a clonal band, 63% with IgH (FR3a) and 88% with a combination of FR3a/FR2b. The results of TCR gamma monoclonality were 50% using primer mix I, 25% using primer mix II and 75% using a combination. In the CLL group, clonal IgH gene rearrangement was detected by FR2b in 80% of cases, while by FR3a clonal rearrangement was detected in 60%, the combination of FR2b and FR3a increased the detection rate to 90%. In B-cell NHL, the FR2b was clonally rearranged in 50% while FR3 was positive in 25%. In reactive lymphocytosis, all cases revealed polyclonal rearrangement with TCR gamma primers. The sensitivity and positive predictive value of GS was 100% and the specificity and negative predictive value was 86.6%. In conclusion, gene scanning provides a sensitive and specific method for detection of the malignant clone in PCR product in patients with lymphoproliferative disorders.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10245330500469817DOI Listing

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