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A plasma-based DNA test for quantification of disease burden in acute myeloid leukemia patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation

Wang, Y.; Xie, J.; Pasca, S.; Popoli, M.; Ptak, J.; Dobbyn, L.; Silliman, N.; Paul, S.; Jones, R. J.; Levis, M. J.; Curtis, S. D.; Douville, C.; Shams, C.; Guo, M. Z.; Mo, S.; Gocke, C. D.; Malek, S. N.; Bollard, C. M.; Bettegowda, C.; Kinzler, K. W.; Vogelstein, B.; Papadopoulos, N.; Gondek, L. P.

2026-02-11 oncology
10.64898/2026.02.10.26345949 medRxiv
Show abstract

Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation is the only curative option for many patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). In the current study, we designed and implemented a personalized assay, called v96, incorporating up to 96 mutations in 30 AML patients undergoing transplantation. The assay was performed on DNA derived in cells from the bone marrow as well as in cell-free plasma. All 30 (100%) of patients harbored molecular evidence of residual leukemia during remission that was detectable by the v96 assay, while only 6 (20%) had evidence of disease as assessed by conventional clinical assays. Furthermore, cell-free DNA from plasma proved to be more sensitive than DNA from cells of the bone marrow for identifying residual leukemia. The median number of mutants was 352-fold higher in plasma taken prior to transplantation for patients who relapsed compared to those who did not relapse. At two months post-transplantation, 27 of the 30 patients still harbored detectable leukemia as assessed by the v96 assay. Twenty-two of these patients had a subsequent decrease in leukemic burden assessed by the v96 assay, usually only after immunosuppression was discontinued and supporting a graft-versus-leukemia effect. These results document the feasibility of using a relatively large panel of carefully chosen mutations and a highly specific assay as non-invasive markers of therapeutic response in AML patients, minimizing the need for multiple bone marrow biopsies. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCEWe report a blood test that tracks up to 96 patient-specific mutations and applied it to patients with AML who had undergone bone marrow transplantation. Using this test to evaluate cell-free plasma DNA, we found evidence of residual leukemia cells both during remission (prior to transplantation) in all patients, and two months following transplantation in 90% of patients. This test can mitigate the need for invasive bone marrow biopsies to follow patients with leukemia. Moreover, the test appears to be more accurate than standard assays for detecting residual leukemia, and has the potential to guide the timing of transplantation and subsequent therapeutic measures, thereby laying the foundation for future prospective studies.

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