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The goal of this study is to understand how the protein CD81 affects myeloid leukemia (especially AML) and whether it can help predict patient outcomes or guide treatment.
The main question it aims to answer:
Is high CD81 expression in myeloid leukemia cells linked to more aggressive disease, poorer treatment response, or shorter survival in patients?
Participants:
Full description
CD81, a cell surface protein belonging to the tetraspanin family, is overexpressed in 60-90% of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients and correlates with aggressive disease manifestations. Clinically, CD81-positive AML demonstrates elevated total leucocytic counts, increased lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels, higher bone marrow blast percentages, and a predominance in M1-M5 French-American-British (FAB) subtypes. Critically, this marker predicts adverse outcomes: reduced complete remission rates (12% vs. 24% in CD81-negative cohorts), higher relapse incidence (38% vs. 12%), and inferior overall, event-free, and relapse-free survival. Multivariate analyses confirm CD81 as an independent prognostic indicator, even within cytogenetically normal AML or NPM1-mutated subgroups.
Current AML risk stratification depends heavily on cytogenetic and molecular profiling (e.g., NPM1, FLT3-ITD). Nevertheless, 40-50% of patients lack identifiable high-risk genetic lesions, complicating clinical prognostication. Although flow cytometry enables rapid detection of CD81 surface expression, this biomarker remains underutilized in risk models despite its adverse impact mirroring established high-risk features. Mechanistically, CD81s involvement in metastasis and stem cell quiescence positions it as both a prognostic tool and a candidate therapeutic target.
Notably, CD81 expression remains uncharacterized in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). Given CMLs distinct BCR::ABL1-driven pathogenesis and clinical trajectory from chronic phase to blast crisis, evaluating CD81s role may reveal novel biological insights or therapeutic vulnerabilities during disease progression.
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. Patients with other haematological neoplasms (ALL,CLL, plasma cell myeloma, etc)
66 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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