Search
What are you looking for?
Start main content

Press Releases

Press Releases

https://med.cuhk.edu.hk/press-releases/cu-medicine-s-nationwide-multicentre-study-on-acute-lymphoblastic-leukaemia-establishes-a-new-biomarker-to-inform-relapse-risk-and-treatment-strategies
https://med.cuhk.edu.hk/press-releases/cu-medicine-s-nationwide-multicentre-study-on-acute-lymphoblastic-leukaemia-establishes-a-new-biomarker-to-inform-relapse-risk-and-treatment-strategies

CU Medicine’s nationwide multicentre study on acute lymphoblastic leukaemia establishes a new biomarker to inform relapse risk and treatment strategies

Acute Lymphoblastic Leukaemia (ALL) is the most common cancer in children. Risk-directed therapies are the contemporary protocol for managing childhood ALL, where the treatment intensity is adjusted according to the patient’s risk level to achieve an optimal balance between efficacy and toxicity. While the overall cure rate of ALL has reached 90%, therapeutic responses remain heterogeneous. The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK)’s Faculty of Medicine (CU Medicine) conducted a nationwide, multicentre study on childhood ALL and confirmed that the CD9 protein is highly associated with the prognoses of ALL patients, meaning it can serve as an independent biomarker to predict the risk of relapse and inform appropriate treatment. The findings have been published in the international medical journal Leukemia.   

 

Professor Li Chi-kong, Professor Albert Li and Professor Leung Kam-tong

CU Medicine conducted a nationwide, multicentre study on childhood ALL and confirmed that the CD9 protein is highly associated with the prognoses of ALL patients, meaning it can serve as an independent biomarker to predict the risk of relapse and inform appropriate treatment. (From left) Professor Li Chi-kong, Research Professor; Professor Albert Martin Li, Department Chairman and Director of Hong Kong Hub of Paediatric Excellence; and Professor Leung Kam-tong, Assistant Professor in the Department of Paediatrics at CU Medicine.  

A new prognostic marker to predict treatment outcomes for ALL patients

 

ALL contributes to 30% of all children’s cancer cases. Among them, 90% are B-cell ALL (B-ALL) and 10% are T-cell ALL (T-ALL). There are around 50 new cases in Hong Kong and 15,000 new cases nationwide each year.

 

Chemotherapy with or without bone marrow transplantation are the standard treatments for ALL. Based on baseline clinical and pathological features as well as early-stage treatment responses, patients are stratified to receive different treatment intensities, where high-intensity treatments are offered to high-risk patients and vice versa. This approach has made ALL one of the most curable childhood cancers.    

 

Professor Li Chi-kong, Research Professor in the Department of Paediatrics at CU Medicine, said, “Treatment responses vary even for patients belonging to the same risk group. Therefore, we are committed to identifying reliable biomarkers with added prognostic values to refine the current risk stratification system and inform more appropriate therapies.” 

 

Prof Leung and Prof Li

(Left) Professor Leung Kam-tong explains that detection of CD9 on the surface of cancer cells helps identify ALL patients at the highest risk of relapse, and provides insights for management of patients suffering from the disease.

(Right) Professor Li Chi-kong says the role of CD9 in risk stratification of ALL patients has just been confirmed. CU Medicine team is now working with mainland counterparts to further investigate on the way to apply this important finding to incorporate into the next clinical protocol. 

CD9 status helps to identify genuinely high-risk patients

 

A prior single-centre local study conducted by the same CU Medicine research team in 2020 showed the CD9 protein as one potential marker that can indicate the prognosis of childhood ALL. They discovered that B-ALL patients displayed a heterogeneous, subtype-specific CD9 expression. In conjunction with other risk factors, the team found that CD9 expression is highly predictive of relapse. However, a larger-scale study is required to confirm its clinical value.

 

Professor Leung Kam-tong, Assistant Professor in the Department of Paediatrics at CU Medicine, explained, “CD9 is a cell surface protein. Early studies revealed that CD9 is involved in a variety of cellular activities, such as cell migration, adhesion and differentiation, and its expression has been implicated in the progression of multiple cancers.” 

 

Prof. Albert Li

Professor Albert Li says CU Medicine is world-leading in childhood leukaemia research. The team wishes their findings will be paradigm-shifting and push the cure rate to 100%, to be precise, so that they are not losing a single child to leukaemia.  

Professor Albert Martin Li, Chairman of the Department of Paediatrics and Director of Hong Kong Hub of Paediatric Excellence (HK HOPE) at CU Medicine, said, “Researchers at HK HOPE have been conducting advanced research on childhood cancers to deliver more effective treatments for difficult cases. The number of childhood ALL cases in mainland China is far more than that in Hong Kong, providing abundant medical data for us to examine the prognostic value of CD9. Our team, therefore, launched a nationwide, multicentre study in 2021, which was the largest in scale of its kind. The study findings will impact future treatment of childhood ALL in Hong Kong, the mainland and around the world.”

To conduct the study, CU Medicine collaborated with a research team led by Shanghai Children’s Medical Centre’s Professor Shen Shuhong and St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital’s Professor Pui Ching-hon. They recruited 3,781 ALL cases from 20 tertiary hospitals across the country. All patients received uniform treatment between 2015 and 2019. The team collected CD9, clinical and pathological data, and conducted a retrospective analysis. The key findings are:

 

  • CD9 was widely expressed in 88.5% of B-ALL patients but only in 27.2% of T-ALL patients.
  • CD9-positive B-ALL patients had poorer outcomes than those who were CD9-negative: being CD9-positive conferred a lower five-year event-free survival rate and doubled the risk of relapse. However, the same did not apply to T-ALL patients.
  • CD9-positive B-ALL patients in the intermediate/high-risk groups were at a high risk of relapse. Their cumulative incidence of relapse over five years reached 23.1%, whereas that of CD9-negative patients remained low at 10.5%. 
  • Patients with minimal residual disease after chemotherapy or bearing the BCR-ABL1 aberration, who were concurrently positive for CD9, had a very high relapse risk. Bone marrow transplantation or innovative therapies will be required.

Professor Leung concluded, “Our study proved that CD9 is an excellent biomarker capable of identifying high-risk ALL patients at an early stage, so that doctors can adopt appropriate treatment strategies to lower the risk of relapse and improve their survival. We suggest integrating CD9 into the routine diagnostic tests for childhood ALL. It has profound clinical value and will lead to new guidelines for risk stratification and management of patients suffering from the disease.”      

More Press Releases

CUHK’s HK-HOPE develops an integrated drug and genomic test to tailor precision personalised medicine and deliver “hope” to children with difficult-to-treat leukaemia

CUHK’s HK-HOPE develops an integrated drug and genomic test to tailor precision personalised medicine and deliver “hope” to children with difficult-to-treat leukaemia

Research
CUHK Establishes Hong Kong Hub of Paediatric Excellence (HK HOPE) Multidisciplinary Efforts Across the Globe to Advance Children’s Health and Well-being

CUHK Establishes Hong Kong Hub of Paediatric Excellence (HK HOPE) Multidisciplinary Efforts Across the Globe to Advance Children’s Health and Well-being

Health Campaign
CU Medicine identifies a “fish allergenicity ladder” system, promoting evidence-based, personalised seafood avoidance for patients with fish allergy

CU Medicine identifies a “fish allergenicity ladder” system, promoting evidence-based, personalised seafood avoidance for patients with fish allergy

Research
CUHK proves its self-developed oral microencapsulated live bacteria formula SIM03 improves disease severity and quality of life in children with eczema

CUHK proves its self-developed oral microencapsulated live bacteria formula SIM03 improves disease severity and quality of life in children with eczema

Research
CU Medicine finds surgical treatment lowers blood pressure in children with severe obstructive sleep apnoea but postoperative weight control is equally important

CU Medicine finds surgical treatment lowers blood pressure in children with severe obstructive sleep apnoea but postoperative weight control is equally important

Research
CU Medicine study identifies 11 allergen components of shrimp for  precision diagnosis of shrimp allergy

CU Medicine study identifies 11 allergen components of shrimp for precision diagnosis of shrimp allergy

Research
CUHK unravels the world’s most comprehensive genome profile of the American cockroach and reveals novel cockroach allergens for the development of precision immunotherapy

CUHK unravels the world’s most comprehensive genome profile of the American cockroach and reveals novel cockroach allergens for the development of precision immunotherapy

Research
COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the daily lives of schoolchildren in Hong Kong; Proportion of overweight and obese kids more than doubled

COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the daily lives of schoolchildren in Hong Kong; Proportion of overweight and obese kids more than doubled

Research
CUHK unveils the evolutionary history of medically important mites, laying the genomics groundwork for diagnosis of and intervention in mite allergy

CUHK unveils the evolutionary history of medically important mites, laying the genomics groundwork for diagnosis of and intervention in mite allergy

Research
CU Medicine proves basophil activation test has much higher diagnostic accuracy  for shrimp allergy than conventional allergy tests

CU Medicine proves basophil activation test has much higher diagnostic accuracy for shrimp allergy than conventional allergy tests

Research
CU Medicine Study Shows Childhood Obstructive Sleep Apnoea Increases the Risk of Hypertension in Adulthood

CU Medicine Study Shows Childhood Obstructive Sleep Apnoea Increases the Risk of Hypertension in Adulthood

Research
CUHK Study Finds Half of Childhood Cancer Survivors Used Complementary and Alternative Medicine

CUHK Study Finds Half of Childhood Cancer Survivors Used Complementary and Alternative Medicine

Research
CU Medicine Study Suggests Toddlers are at High Risk of Being  “Silent Spreaders of SARS-CoV2 Infection”

CU Medicine Study Suggests Toddlers are at High Risk of Being “Silent Spreaders of SARS-CoV2 Infection”

Research
CU Medicine Studies Suggest Grass Carp as a Major Source of Fish Allergy in Hong Kong And Identify Novel Allergenic Marker Cten i 1 to Promote Accurate Diagnosis

CU Medicine Studies Suggest Grass Carp as a Major Source of Fish Allergy in Hong Kong And Identify Novel Allergenic Marker Cten i 1 to Promote Accurate Diagnosis

Research
CUHK Introduces Nasal Strip Sampling for COVID-19 Test As a Superior Tool for Surveillance in a Wide Age-Range Population

CUHK Introduces Nasal Strip Sampling for COVID-19 Test As a Superior Tool for Surveillance in a Wide Age-Range Population

Research
CUHK Study Sees the Exposure to Farm Environment  Is Beneficial for Children to Prevent Asthma

CUHK Study Sees the Exposure to Farm Environment Is Beneficial for Children to Prevent Asthma

Research
CUHK to Commence the Next-Generation Clinical Trials of CAR-T Cell Therapy for Haematological Malignancy

CUHK to Commence the Next-Generation Clinical Trials of CAR-T Cell Therapy for Haematological Malignancy

Research
CUHK-Designed Intervention Package Proves Effective to Increase Influenza Vaccine Uptake in Hong Kong Young Children

CUHK-Designed Intervention Package Proves Effective to Increase Influenza Vaccine Uptake in Hong Kong Young Children

Research
CUHK Study Sees Shorter Sleep Put Adolescents at Risk of Future Cardiovascular Diseases

CUHK Study Sees Shorter Sleep Put Adolescents at Risk of Future Cardiovascular Diseases

Research
CUHK Recommends Oral Glucose Tolerance Test for All Pregnant Women Study Reveals Children of Women with Gestational Diabetes Mellitus Have 3-Fold Diabetes Risk

CUHK Recommends Oral Glucose Tolerance Test for All Pregnant Women Study Reveals Children of Women with Gestational Diabetes Mellitus Have 3-Fold Diabetes Risk

Research
CUHK Proves Rotavirus Vaccine Highly Effective for HK Children

CUHK Proves Rotavirus Vaccine Highly Effective for HK Children

Research
CUHK Conducts Hong Kong’s First Study on Seven Common Respiratory Viruses Revealing Respiratory Syncytial Virus and Influenza A as Prevalent Fatal Types

CUHK Conducts Hong Kong’s First Study on Seven Common Respiratory Viruses Revealing Respiratory Syncytial Virus and Influenza A as Prevalent Fatal Types

Research
CUHK Launches Newborn Add-on Test for Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia Supported by Joshua Hellmann Foundation for Orphan Disease

CUHK Launches Newborn Add-on Test for Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia Supported by Joshua Hellmann Foundation for Orphan Disease

Donation
CUHK Unveils Genome of Dermatophagoides farinae Casting New Light on Diagnosis and Interventions of Inhalant Allergies

CUHK Unveils Genome of Dermatophagoides farinae Casting New Light on Diagnosis and Interventions of Inhalant Allergies

Research
CUHK Launches Territory-wide Sleep Health Education Campaign to Promote Healthy Sleep and Healthy School Life

CUHK Launches Territory-wide Sleep Health Education Campaign to Promote Healthy Sleep and Healthy School Life

Health Campaign
CUHK Pioneers MRI Iron Assessment for Thalassemia Children in Southern China

CUHK Pioneers MRI Iron Assessment for Thalassemia Children in Southern China

Clinical service
CUHK Discovers the Environmental Factors in Family and School Behind Constipation in HK Children

CUHK Discovers the Environmental Factors in Family and School Behind Constipation in HK Children

Research

Our Expert List

Many experts under the Faculty of Medicine are available for media interview.
Please click here for the expert list or contact us.