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Blood, Vol. 96 No. 1 (July 1), 2000: pp. 63-70

Consensus strategy to quantitate malignant cells in myeloma patients is validated in a multicenter study

Peter Willems, Onno Verhagen, Christine Segeren, Peter Veenhuizen, Jeroen Guikema, Erik Wiemer, Laura Groothuis, Tineke Buitenweg-de Jong, Henriëtte Kok, Andries Bloem, Nico Bos, Edo Vellenga, Ewald Mensink, Pieter Sonneveld, Henk Lokhorst Ellen van der Schoot, and Reinier Raymakers; for the Belgium-Dutch Hematology-Oncology Group

From the Department of Hematology, Academic Hospital Rotterdam; the Department of Hematology, Erasmus University Rotterdam; the Department of Hematology, Academic Hospital Nijmegen; the Departments of Hematology and Immunology, Academic Hospital Utrecht; the Department of Hematology, Academic Hospital Groningen; the Department of Immunohematology, Central Laboratory of the Netherlands Red Cross Blood Transfusion Service; and the Department of Histology and Cell Biology, University of Groningen, the Netherlands.

Recently the Belgium-Dutch Hematology-Oncology group initiated a multicenter study to evaluate whether myeloma patients treated with intensive chemotherapy benefit from additional peripheral stem cell transplantation. To determine treatment response accurately, we decided to quantitate malignant cells. To test a consensus quantitation strategy, 5 centers independently determined the immunoglobulin heavy chain sequences of patient tumor cells and developed allele-specific oligonucleotides (ASO) and ASO-polymerase chain reaction (PCR). We compared the reproducibility of real-time quantitation with quantitation using limiting dilutions. We distributed DNA samples with a 4-log range of tumor cell concentrations and found average quantitation values deviating 74% and 42% from the input values with real-time PCR (1 center) and limiting dilutions (4 centers), respectively. Within single centers we found an average variation coefficient of 0.74, with limiting dilutions not significantly different from the average 0.82 center-to-center variation coefficient. Within a single center, real-time quantitation proved more reproducible (average variation coefficient, 0.36). Quantification was confirmed in 3 patients during treatment in the protocol. This report shows that real-time PCR or limiting dilution assays can be used for quantitation in a single multicenter trial. We present a consensus strategy that allows an accurate comparison of quantitation data generated in independent centers.


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