Blood Basophil Concentration at Diagnosis Corelates with Prognosis in Newly-Diagnosed Persons with Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia

Background Basophilia is common in chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) and is associated with a poor prognosis. Previously it was quantified by percentage and a binary < or ≥ 20%. However, blood basophil concentration at diagnosis may be a better prognostic co-variate. Methods The hypothesis generati...

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Published inBlood Vol. 142; no. Supplement 1; p. 6374
Main Authors Vrablova, Lucia, Zhang, Xiaoshuai, Kriegova, Eva, Kudelka, Milos, Radvansky, Martin, Yang, Sen, Juranova, Jaroslava, Papajik, Tomas, Gale, Robert Peter, Jiang, Qian, Faber, Edgar
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 02.11.2023
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Summary:Background Basophilia is common in chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) and is associated with a poor prognosis. Previously it was quantified by percentage and a binary < or ≥ 20%. However, blood basophil concentration at diagnosis may be a better prognostic co-variate. Methods The hypothesis generating cohort was a 135 newly-diagnosed subjects with BCR::ABL1-positive CML receiving a tyrosine kinase-inhibitor (TKI). Median follow-up was 6.3 years (range, 4-16 years). Data were analyzed by Kaplan-Meier curves and multi-variable patient similarity network (PSN). A cohort of 1919 subjects was used to validate the test hypothesis. Subject gave informed consent for non-interventional data collection and the study was approved by Ethics Committees. Results Multi-variable PSNs of the hypothesis generating cohort indicated 5 subject clusters. Incidence of TKI switch was highest in clusters 1 (45%), 5 (40%) and 4 (30%) which were characterized by the increased basophil concentrations at diagnosis compared with clusters 2 (13%) and 3 (14%) with the low basophil concentrations at diagnosis. PSNs identified the combination of basophil concentration ≥ 8x10E+9/L, basophil percentage ≥ 5 % and WBC ≥ 164x10E+9/L to be associated with significantly worse FFS (p < 0.001) and PFS ( p = 0.02) but not survival ( p = 0.18). Basophil concentration ≥ 8x10E+9/L and WBC concentration ≥ 164x10E+9/L were associated with worse EFS (p < 0.001), (FFS (p < 0.001; Figure 1) but not PFS or survival. Basophil percentage at diagnosis had no impact on outcomes using ≥ 5% or ≥ 20% cutoffs. In the validation cohort the combination of basophil concentration ≥ 8x10E+9/L, basophil percentage ≥ 5% and WBC ≥ 164x10E+9/L at diagnosis was associated with worse FFS ( p < 0.001) but not PFS or survival. Basophils ≥ 5% was associated with worse survival ( p = 0.04) and ≥ 20% with worse FFS ( p = 0.04) and survival ( p = 0.009). Basophil concentration ≥ 8×10E+9/L was associated with worse PFS ( p < 0.001; Figure 1) and survival ( p = 0.03). There was no effect of WBC concentration on any outcome. Conclusion We show blood basophil concentration at diagnosis correlates with diverse outcomes in newly-diagnosed persons with CML receiving TKI-therapy. Support IGA_LF_2023_05, MH_CZ-DRO (FNOL, 00098892)
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood-2023-187548