Title of article
Molecular remission and non-Hodgkinʹs lymphoma
Author/Authors
Angela J. Darby، نويسنده , , Peter W. M. Johnson، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages
14
From page
549
To page
562
Abstract
Non-Hodgkinʹs lymphomas are highly sensitive to treatment and complete clinical responses are often achieved. However, disease recurrence is common and is caused by the persistence of malignant lymphoma cells at a level below the limits of detection by conventional assessment such as clinical examination, bone marrow morphology and CT scans. This minimal residual disease can be detected using molecular techniques such as the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and treatments capable of eliminating minimal residual disease are described as producing molecular remission. Molecular assessment is now commonly used as a measure of outcome in clinical trials of novel therapies for the treatment of lymphoma. The evidence for using molecular remission as a surrogate marker of clinical response in this setting is reviewed and the significance of minimal residual disease in determining prognosis and planning treatment strategies is addressed.
Keywords
polymerase chain reaction , Bcl-2 , Minimal residual disease , Non-Hodgkinיs lymphoma , chromosomal translocation , follicular lymphoma , mantle-cell lymphoma , immunoglobulin rearrangement
Journal title
Best Practice and Research Clinical Haematology
Serial Year
2002
Journal title
Best Practice and Research Clinical Haematology
Record number
467483
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