Serum levels of free light chain before and after chemotherapy in primary systemic AL amyloidosis
- PMID: 15942088
- DOI: 10.2169/internalmedicine.44.428
Serum levels of free light chain before and after chemotherapy in primary systemic AL amyloidosis
Abstract
Objective: Immunoglobulin-related free light chains (FLCs) in serum have recently become quantitatively detectable using the nephelometric assay in plasma cell disorders, including multiple myeloma and AL amyloidosis. To investigate whether FLCs are useful as a diagnostic and therapeutic marker in Japanese patients with primary systemic AL amyloidosis, we determined these values in serum before and after chemotherapy.
Patients and methods: The serum FLC analysis was carried out in 25 patients with primary systemic AL amyloidosis (mean age, 60.1+/-8.4 years). All of the patients were shown to have either ALkappa- or ALlambda-immunoreactive amyloid deposits on biopsied tissues. Thirteen patients were treated with VAD (vincristine, doxorubicin and dexamethasone) alone (n=6) or VAD and subsequent high-dose melphalan followed by autologous stem cell support (n=7), and serum FLCs were serially determined before and after the chemotherapy.
Results: Before chemotherapy the amyloidogenic FLC was elevated in serum with or without abnormal e/e ratios in 24 patients, including 5 with undetectable M-protein in both serum and urine on immunofixation. After chemotherapy the amyloidogenic FLC in serum was significantly decreased irrespective of high-dose melphalan (p<0.05), and all the patients with normalized kappa/lambda ratios showed a good prognosis.
Conclusions: With respect to sensitivity and quantification serum FLCs will be a key marker for diagnosis and therapeutic effects in primary systemic AL amyloidosis. The prognosis of patients with this disease may be improved if the kappa/lambda ratio in serum can be normalized by intensive chemotherapy.
Comment in
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Role of immunoglobulin light chains in Al amyloidosis.Intern Med. 2005 May;44(5):399-400. doi: 10.2169/internalmedicine.44.399. Intern Med. 2005. PMID: 15942079 No abstract available.
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