Remission Assessment by Circulating Tumor DNA in Large B-Cell Lymphoma.
1/5 보강
PICO 자동 추출 (휴리스틱, conf 2/4)
유사 논문P · Population 대상 환자/모집단
137 patients by monitoring 409 plasma specimens over time.
I · Intervention 중재 / 시술
추출되지 않음
C · Comparison 대조 / 비교
추출되지 않음
O · Outcome 결과 / 결론
[CONCLUSION] Ultrasensitive ctDNA detection after frontline LBCL therapy is more prognostic than conventional radiographic response criteria. A refined definition of remission with ctDNA-MRD may improve clinical and psychological outcomes for patients with LBCL.
[PURPOSE] Large B-cell lymphomas (LBCLs) are curable, but patients with residual disease after therapy invariably experience progression.
- 추적기간 37 months
APA
Roschewski M, Kurtz DM, et al. (2025). Remission Assessment by Circulating Tumor DNA in Large B-Cell Lymphoma.. Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, 43(34), 3652-3661. https://doi.org/10.1200/JCO-25-01534
MLA
Roschewski M, et al.. "Remission Assessment by Circulating Tumor DNA in Large B-Cell Lymphoma.." Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, vol. 43, no. 34, 2025, pp. 3652-3661.
PMID
40802906 ↗
Abstract 한글 요약
[PURPOSE] Large B-cell lymphomas (LBCLs) are curable, but patients with residual disease after therapy invariably experience progression. Ultrasensitive methods to detect circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) as minimal residual disease (MRD) may improve the determination of remission.
[METHODS] We integrated data from five prospective studies of frontline anthracycline-based chemotherapy in patients with LBCL. Tumor-specific phased variants were identified from pretreatment samples and monitored at landmark time points. Serial plasma specimens were blindly analyzed for detectable ctDNA as MRD. MRD status was compared with conventional response criteria for prognosis of progression-free survival (PFS).
[RESULTS] We studied ctDNA-MRD in 137 patients by monitoring 409 plasma specimens over time. Detectable ctDNA rates decreased during therapy with 55% and 78% of patients achieving undetectable ctDNA after two cycles and at the end of therapy, respectively. After a median follow-up of 37 months, the 2-year PFS for patients with detectable versus undetectable ctDNA after two cycles was 67% versus 96% ( = .0025; hazard ratio [HR], 6.9) and after therapy was 29% versus 97% ( < .0001; HR, 28.7), respectively. Ninety-two (94%) patients with undetectable ctDNA at the end of therapy remained alive without progression, while 19 (68%) patients with detectable ctDNA progressed or died. MRD status at the end of therapy had greater prognostic utility than conventional lymphoma response criteria using positron emission tomography (PET) scans (HR, 3.6 for positive PET and 28.3 for detectable ctDNA).
[CONCLUSION] Ultrasensitive ctDNA detection after frontline LBCL therapy is more prognostic than conventional radiographic response criteria. A refined definition of remission with ctDNA-MRD may improve clinical and psychological outcomes for patients with LBCL.
[METHODS] We integrated data from five prospective studies of frontline anthracycline-based chemotherapy in patients with LBCL. Tumor-specific phased variants were identified from pretreatment samples and monitored at landmark time points. Serial plasma specimens were blindly analyzed for detectable ctDNA as MRD. MRD status was compared with conventional response criteria for prognosis of progression-free survival (PFS).
[RESULTS] We studied ctDNA-MRD in 137 patients by monitoring 409 plasma specimens over time. Detectable ctDNA rates decreased during therapy with 55% and 78% of patients achieving undetectable ctDNA after two cycles and at the end of therapy, respectively. After a median follow-up of 37 months, the 2-year PFS for patients with detectable versus undetectable ctDNA after two cycles was 67% versus 96% ( = .0025; hazard ratio [HR], 6.9) and after therapy was 29% versus 97% ( < .0001; HR, 28.7), respectively. Ninety-two (94%) patients with undetectable ctDNA at the end of therapy remained alive without progression, while 19 (68%) patients with detectable ctDNA progressed or died. MRD status at the end of therapy had greater prognostic utility than conventional lymphoma response criteria using positron emission tomography (PET) scans (HR, 3.6 for positive PET and 28.3 for detectable ctDNA).
[CONCLUSION] Ultrasensitive ctDNA detection after frontline LBCL therapy is more prognostic than conventional radiographic response criteria. A refined definition of remission with ctDNA-MRD may improve clinical and psychological outcomes for patients with LBCL.
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