Messmer Bradley T, Messmer Davorka, Allen Steven L, Kolitz Jonathan E, Kudalkar Prasad, Cesar Denise, Murphy Elizabeth J, Koduru Prasad, Ferrarini Manlio, Zupo Simona, Cutrona Giovanna, Damle Rajendra N, Wasil Tarun, Rai Kanti R, Hellerstein Marc K, Chiorazzi Nicholas
Institute for Medical Research, North Shore-LIJ Research Institute, Manhasset, New York 11030, USA
J Clin Invest. 2005 Mar;115(3):755-64. doi: 10.1172/JCI23409.
Due to its relatively slow clinical progression, B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) is classically described as a disease of accumulation rather than proliferation. However, evidence for various forms of clonal evolution suggests that B-CLL clones may be more dynamic than previously assumed. We used a nonradioactive, stable isotopic labeling method to measure B-CLL cell kinetics in vivo. Nineteen patients drank an aliquot of deuterated water (2H2O) daily for 84 days, and 2H incorporation into the deoxyribose moiety of DNA of newly divided B-CLL cells was measured by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry, during and after the labeling period. Birth rates were calculated from the kinetic profiles. Death rates were defined as the difference between calculated birth and growth rates. These analyses demonstrated that the leukemic cells of each patient had definable and often substantial birth rates, varying from 0.1% to greater than 1.0% of the entire clone per day. Those patients with birth rates greater than 0.35% per day were much more likely to exhibit active or to develop progressive disease than those with lower birth rates Thus, B-CLL is not a static disease that results simply from accumulation of long-lived lymphocytes. Rather, it is a dynamic process composed also of cells that proliferate and die, often at appreciable levels. The extent to which this turnover occurs has not been previously appreciated. A correlation between birth rates and disease activity and progression appears to exist, which may help identify patients at risk for worsening disease in advance of clinical deterioration.
由于其临床进展相对缓慢,B细胞慢性淋巴细胞白血病(B-CLL)传统上被描述为一种积聚性疾病而非增殖性疾病。然而,各种形式的克隆进化证据表明,B-CLL克隆可能比之前认为的更具动态性。我们使用一种非放射性的稳定同位素标记方法来测量体内B-CLL细胞动力学。19名患者连续84天每天饮用一份氘代水(2H2O),在标记期间及之后,通过气相色谱/质谱法测量新分裂的B-CLL细胞DNA的脱氧核糖部分中2H的掺入情况。根据动力学曲线计算出生率。死亡率定义为计算出的出生率与生长率之间的差值。这些分析表明,每位患者的白血病细胞都有可定义且通常相当可观的出生率,每天占整个克隆的0.1%至超过1.0%。那些每天出生率大于0.35%的患者比出生率较低的患者更有可能表现出活动性疾病或发展为进展性疾病。因此,B-CLL并非仅仅是由长寿淋巴细胞积聚导致的静态疾病。相反,它是一个动态过程,其中也包括增殖和死亡的细胞,且这些细胞的数量往往相当可观。此前人们尚未认识到这种细胞更新发生的程度。出生率与疾病活动及进展之间似乎存在相关性,这可能有助于在临床恶化之前识别出疾病恶化风险较高的患者。