Background: Expression of ZAP-70 is associated with unmutated immunoglobulin heavy chain variable region genes and poor prognosis in B-cell CLL. Reliable clinical flow cytometric assays have been difficult to establish, as many anti-ZAP-70 antibodies show a suboptimal signal-to-noise ratio, and an imperfect correlation with IgVH mutation status.

Methods: We studied fresh peripheral blood or bone marrow specimens from forty-three patients with CLL/SLL. Samples were stained for intracytoplasmic ZAP-70 using a standard monoclonal antibody, 1E7.2/PE (Caltag, Burlingame, CA), and the novel monoclonal antibody J13–1164/PE (kindly provided by BD Biosciences, San Diego, CA). Threshholds were set using isotype-matched negative control antibodies. Mutational status of the IgVH genes was assessed by RT-PCR, followed by standard Sanger DNA sequencing. Divergence from germline IgVH segments (IMGT database) was calculated using VBASE, with 2% or less changes over codons 1–94 of IgVH regarded as unmutated.

Results: Staining with J13–1164 revealed a clear apparent cutpoint in levels of positivity, with 26/43 (60%) of the CLL cases showing >49% of cells above the isotype threshhold. Most of the remaining cases (15/43, 35%) showed <26% of cells positive. The 1E7.2/PE reagent yielded a similar number of positive cases, with 28/43 (65%) showing >20% positive cells (the cutpoint suggested by Rassenti et al., N Engl J Med 2004, 351:893). However, staining with 1E7.2 was more difficult to interpret, as many cases had levels of positivity that were close to the cutpoint, with 15/43 (35%) showing 10–30% of cells positive. Both antibodies showed similar degrees of correlation with IgVH mutation status, with 72–75% of unmutated cases showing the expected positivity for ZAP-70, and 57–64% of mutated cases negative for ZAP-70 (see Table 1). The two antibodies yielded concordant results in about half of cases (21/43), and the concordant cases showed a strong correlation with IgVH mutation status: 15/16 cases positive with both antibodies had unmutated genes, and 4/5 cases negative with both antibodies had mutated genes (see Table 2). The cases with discordant staining between the two antibodies were a mixture of cases with mutated or unmutated IgVH genes.

Conclusions: The J13–1164 anti-ZAP-70 antibody provides more easily interpretable results in routine clinical use than the 1E7.2 clone, with brighter staining in many cases and a more distinct difference between positive and negative cases in our series. Compared to the 1E7.2 clone, the J13–1164 clone shows a similar degree of correlation with the IgVH mutation status. A combination of both antibodies provides the strongest correlation with IgVH mutation status, with 19/21 concordant cases showing the expected staining pattern.

ZAP-70 staining vs IgVH mutation status

UnmutatedMutated
1164 positive 21 
1164 negative 
1E7.2 positive 22 
1E7.2 negative 
UnmutatedMutated
1164 positive 21 
1164 negative 
1E7.2 positive 22 
1E7.2 negative 

IgVH mutation status in concordant vs. discordant cases

1E7.2 positive1E7.2 negative
1164 positive 15/16 unmutated 6/10 unmutated 
1164 negative 7/12 unmutated 4/5 mutated 
1E7.2 positive1E7.2 negative
1164 positive 15/16 unmutated 6/10 unmutated 
1164 negative 7/12 unmutated 4/5 mutated 

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