Methotrexate resistance in relapsed childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia.

  • M G Rots
  • R Pieters
  • G J Peters
  • P Noordhuis
  • C H Van Zantwijk
  • G Henze
  • Gritta Janka-Schaub
  • A J Veerman
  • G Jansen

Abstract

Treatment failure in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) might be associated with methotrexate (MTX) resistance. Little is known about MTX resistance in relapsed ALL. In this study, we determined ex vivo MTX resistance in precursor-B ALL at relapse (rALL) and determined possible defects in MTX membrane transport and polyglutamylation. Using the in situ thymidylate synthase inhibition assay, 21 rALL samples were threefold more MTX resistant than 63 initial precursor-B ALL samples, both after short-term and after continuous MTX exposure (P <or = 0.01). [3H]-MTX membrane transport did not differ between eight rALL and 25 precursor-B ALL samples. Incubation for 24 h with 1 microM [3H]-MTX resulted in a trend towards a lower accumulation of MTX in 20 relapsed than in 83 initial samples of precursor-B ALL samples (906 vs. 1364 pmol/109 cells; P = 0.07). Accumulation of long-chain MTX polyglutamates (MTX-Glu4-6) did not differ between relapsed and newly diagnosed samples (746 and 889 pmol/109 cells; P = 0.1). Activities of the enzymes involved in polyglutamylation (folylpolyglutamate synthetase and folylpolyglutamate hydrolase) did not differ between rALL and untreated c/pre-B-ALL. This study demonstrates that leukaemic cells of children with relapsed precursor-B ALL are relatively MTX resistant, but that this MTX resistance is not associated with major impairments in MTX uptake or polyglutamylation.

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number3
ISSN0007-1048
Publication statusPublished - 2000
pubmed 10886214