Determination of measurable residual disease (MRD) in pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) using next generation immunosequencing (clonoSEQ; Adaptive Biotechnologies) has emerged as an essential and sensitive tool. The clonoSEQ assay identifies and tracks all the B-cell and T-cell receptor rearrangements present in a sample. With widening clinical use of immunosequencing for MRD monitoring (NGS-MRD), clinicians are increasingly encountering cases with results that are considered to be inconclusive; where immunosequencing yields detectable clonotypic sequences, yet it is unclear whether they indicate ALL, normal background, or an independent etiology. There is a need for guidance in the clinical interpretation of immunosequencing results. In this manuscript we describe various features of immunosequencing reporting and their clinical implications through a series of illustrative clinical cases. Each case presents a distinct scenario encountered in the clinical setting where NGS-MRD had varying clinical implications. Through aggregate evaluation of the various components of the results, such as the sequence locus, sequence abundance, clonal tracking, and levels of detection and blank, we formulate systematic interpretative tools that can be leveraged to inform clinical decision making. The goal of this manuscript is to serve as a useful guide for clinicians as they interpret immunosequencing results for pediatric ALL.
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Rohaum Hamidi
Ilan R. Kirsch
Adaptive Biotechnologies (United States)
Liora M. Schultz
Palo Alto University
Blood Advances
Stanford University
Columbia University
Palo Alto University
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Hamidi et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a286490a974eb0d3c01220 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2025018923
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