Clonal immunoglobulin DNA in the plasma of patients with AIDS lymphoma

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Abstract

Immunoglobulin (Ig) gene rearrangements are used to define clonality of suspected B-lineage malignancy in tissue samples. To determine whether such rearrangements could be identified in plasma, we screened plasma from 14 consecutive patients with AIDS-related lymphoma with multiplex Ig primers. Clonally rearranged Ig DNA was detected in plasma from 7 of 14 patients. Patients in whom clonal Ig DNA remained detectable after combination chemotherapy died with lymphoma. Tumor was available from 1 patient, and the IgH amplification products from plasma and tumor were sequenced and confirmed to be identical. Ig DNA rearrangements in plasma may be useful as a lymphoma-specific tumor marker, and failure to clear clonal Ig DNA may identify patients at high risk for failure of standard therapy. © 2011 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Wagner-Johnston, N. D., Gellert, L., Gocke, C. D., Lemas, V. M., Lee, J., Martínez-Maza, O., & Ambinder, R. F. (2011). Clonal immunoglobulin DNA in the plasma of patients with AIDS lymphoma. Blood, 117(18), 4860–4862. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2010-12-324657

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