Disease status in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia is better characterized by BCR-ABL/BCR transcript ratio than by BCR-ABL transcript level, which may suggest a role of normal BCR gene in the disease pathogenesis
Abstract:
Monitoring of BCR-ABL transcript level is widely used in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) to follow up response to therapy. In this study we compare abilities of two quantitative RT-PCR assays to characterize the disease status in CML patients: RT-PCR quantifying the BCR-ABL transcript concentration and RT-PCR determining the BCR-ABL/BCR transcript ratio (R). We demonstrate that in non-responders only R, but not BCR-ABL, unambiguously characterizes the state of disease. Moreover, R values >1 found in all poor responders indicate lower BCR expression compared to BCR-ABL in these patients. Our results demonstrate the importance of BCR-ABL/BCR transcript ratio for the disease status and the disease prognosis characterization and suggest a possible role of the normal BCR gene expression in CML pathogenesis.