Immune response as a possible mechanism of long-lasting disease control in spontaneous remission of MLL/AF9-positive acute myeloid leukemia.

  • Claudia Müller-Schmah
  • Leticia Solari
  • Roland Weis
  • Dietmar Pfeifer
  • Carmen Scheibenbogen
  • Martin Trepel
  • Annette M May
  • Rupert Engelhardt
  • Michael Lübbert

Related Research units

Abstract

Spontaneous complete remission (CR) is a rare, poorly understood phenomenon in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). We describe the 10-year follow-up of a patient with MLL-AF9-positive AML (Müller et al. Eur J Haematol 73:62-66, 2004), including ex vivo antileukemic immune responses which may contribute to the long-lasting spontaneous CR (tantamount to cure). We could demonstrate strong in vitro cytotoxic activity mediated by the patient's serum (cryopreserved at diagnosis 2001) against myeloid cell lines. We also addressed cellular cytotoxic activity against myeloid leukemia cells. When the patient's natural killer (NK) cells (obtained in 2007) were tested against the K562 cell line, upregulation of CD107 occurred, implying that long-term CR in this patient could be due to NK cell-mediated disease control.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article number1
ISSN0939-5555
Publication statusPublished - 2012
pubmed 21959947