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Analysis of serum free light chains ratio (FLC-r, FreeliteTM), immunoglobulin heavy/light chain pairs ratio (HLC-r, HevyliteTM) and the results of plasma cell multiparametric flow cytometry in relation to progression free survival in multiple myeloma


Authors: V. Ščudla 1,3;  P. Lochman 2;  M. Novák 3;  T. Pika 3;  J. Minařík 3;  K. Langová 4
Authors‘ workplace: III. interní klinika – nefrologická, revmatologická a endokrinologická, Lékařská fakulta Univerzity Palackého a Fakultní nemocnice v Olomouci 1;  Oddělení klinické biochemie, Fakultní nemocnice v Olomouci 2;  Hemato-onkologická klinika, Fakultní nemocnice a Lékařská fakulta Univerzity Palackého v Olomouci 3;  Ústav lékařské biofyziky, Lékařská fakulta Univerzity Palackého v Olomouci 4
Published in: Transfuze Hematol. dnes,22, 2016, No. 1, p. 14-27.
Category: Comprehensive Reports, Original Papers, Case Reports

Overview

Introduction:
Assessment of serum free light chains (FLC) level and more recently of heavy/light chain immunoglobulin (HLC) pairs and analysis of plasma cells using multiparametric flow cytometry (MFC) have enriched the traditional standard algorithm of laboratory tests in multiple myeloma (MM). The aim of the presented study was to assess the relationship between modified indices FLC-r (ratio of involved-FLC/uninvolved-FLC κ and λ) and HLC-r (ratio of involved-HLC/uninvolved-HLC); the presence of plasma cells with normal (N-PC) and abnormal immunophenotype (A-PC) including their ratio (A/N-PC-r); the index of plasma cell clonality and stratification models based on the value of the HLC-r index with PFS (progression free survival).

Patients and methods:
In a cohort of 163 patients with MM, divided into a group treated with conventional chemotherapy (CT) and a group treated with high-dose chemotherapy with autologous peripheral stem cells (HDT/ASCT), we assessed the modified FLC-r (FreeliteTM) and HLC-r (HevyliteTM) indices and the immunophenotype and monoclonality of plasma cells κ/λ with using MFC. Stratification into 3 risk groups was based, apart from the standard ISS system (International Staging System), also on stratification systems according to Avet-Loiseau (AL-SS) and Ludwig (L-SS).

Results:
The analysis revealed a signifiant relationship between HLC-r (but not of FLC-r) and PFS in the whole cohort (p = 0.016) and in the group treated with HDT/ASCT, documented by significant differences in the PFS medians and curves. There was no relationship between N-PC, A-PC, A/N-PC-r, the monoclonality index (κ/λ or λ/κ PC-r) and PFS. Analysis using L-SS and to a certain extent AL-SS of the whole group of MM patients showed a relationship between individual risk groups and PFS (p = 0.001 and p = 0.024), with stronger and clearer significance of standard staging systems ISS (p < 0.0001) and D-S (p = 0.005). Similarly as in the case of AL-SS and L-SS, we found differences in our own modified ISS (OL-SS) using the medians of modified HLC-r (measured as i-HLC/u-HLC ratio assessed separately in IgG and IgA type MM) as the cut-off for risk groups (p = 0.001).

Conclusions:
We confirmed a significant relationship between the modified HLC-r index (i-HLC/u-HLC, HevyliteTM) and PFS but not between the modified FLC-r index (FreeliteTM) or the presence of plasma cells with abnormal or normal immunophenotype including their ratio and the pathological index of monoclonality assessed using MFC. The newly suggested risk stratification models of MM (1-3) according to AL-SS, L-SS and OL-SS, based on the value of HLC-r showed a significant relationship with PFS but one of lesser significance compared to standard ISS staging. The analyzed, newly introduced stratification systems are therefore not suitable for stratifying PFS in routine practice.

Key words:
multiple myeloma – free immunoglobulin light chain – immunoglobulin heavy/light chain pairs – multiparametric flow cytometry – prognostic stratification – progression free survival


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Haematology Internal medicine Clinical oncology

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