Sickle cell disease (SCD) is an inherited autosomal recessive blood disorder associated with significant morbidity. Nonmyeloablative allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is increasingly used in severely affected patients with SCD. These transplants result in mixed hematopoietic chimerism so accurate chimerism testing is important for monitoring the status of the transplant. Reconstitution of the erythroid compartment is essential. Since red cells lack a nucleus, DNA-based chimerism assays do not directly assess the chimerism in the erythroid compartment. Several studies have shown that the chimerism in the white cells and erythroid cells can be very different (W, C., etal. Exp. Hematol. 2003, 31:924; Andreanni, M., etal. Haematologica, 2011, 96:128). We developed a procedure for quantification of chimerism in the erythroid compartment of blood using RNA-based digital droplet PCR (ddPCR). The sensitivity and specificity of the assay was evaluated then tested post-transplant samples from sickle cell patients.

Total RNA is reverse transcribed and amplified in a two-step RT-PCR approach. The PCR reaction containing allele-specific hydrolysis probes is partitioned into ~15,000 droplets then amplified. The copy number of HbA and HbS transcripts from cells of the erythroid lineage is determined with ddPCR (BioRad, QX-200). The %HbA and the %Donor can be calculated using the donor genotype (A/A or A/S). The assay is designed to have a sensitivity of 1% with donor genotype of A/A and 5% with donor genotype of A/S. Each post-transplant sample is tested in duplicate along with an AA control, SS control, AS control and 1% sensitivity controls (5 controls total).

Thirty AA or SS samples were tested to assess assay specificity. The average %HbA detected in a SS sample was 0.03%; the average %HbS in a AA sample was as 0.02%. The background signal is significantly below the cutoff for 1% sensitivity. Using contrived samples with low, medium, and high %HbA, we demonstrate the assay is accurate and linear to 0-2%HbA across the reportable range of 0%HbA to 100%HbA. The % CV of the minor allele for samples in the range of 10%-90%HbA, were equal or below 15%.

A total of 11 post-transplant samples from 7 transplanted sickle cell patients were tested, and the results were compared to DNA-based/FISH chimerism, if available. Our results were comparable with DNA-based chimerism (Table 1). Five of the samples had slightly higher %donor in the erythroid compartment compared to the white cell compartment. The erythroid chimerism reflected changes in chimerism status: the decrease then increase in chimerism (P2), stable chimerism (P5) and graft failure (P7).

Abstract 563. Table 1:

Erythroid chimerism status of post-transplant SCD patients

Patient # Donor Genotype Sample # %HbA %Donor %Recipient %Donor by FISH/STR 
P1 AS 52 100 95 
P2  AA 66 66 34 72 
44 44 56 50 
100 100 95 
P3 AS 54 100 85 
P4 AA 100 100 100 
P5  AS 14 28 72 15 
12 24 76 15 
P6 AS 57 100 95 
P7  AA 100 Rejecting graft 
100 Rejecting graft 
Patient # Donor Genotype Sample # %HbA %Donor %Recipient %Donor by FISH/STR 
P1 AS 52 100 95 
P2  AA 66 66 34 72 
44 44 56 50 
100 100 95 
P3 AS 54 100 85 
P4 AA 100 100 100 
P5  AS 14 28 72 15 
12 24 76 15 
P6 AS 57 100 95 
P7  AA 100 Rejecting graft 
100 Rejecting graft 

Assessment of the chimerism in the erythroid lineage may be a better indicator of donor erythropoiesis. We describe an accurate and sensitive assay for monitoring erythroid chimerism and the effects of post-transplant therapies in sickle cell patients undergoing HSCT. This assay also demonstrates the feasibility measuring erythroid chimerism detection in other hematologic disorders, such as thalassemia.

Disclosures

No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Author notes

*

Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

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