Lukasz Sedek
Medical University of Silesia
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Publication
Featured researches published by Lukasz Sedek.
Leukemia | 2012
J J M van Dongen; L Lhermitte; S Böttcher; Julia Almeida; V H J van der Velden; Juan Flores-Montero; Andy C. Rawstron; Vahid Asnafi; Quentin Lecrevisse; Paulo Lúcio; Ester Mejstrikova; T Szczepanski; Tomáš Kalina; R de Tute; Monika Brüggemann; Lukasz Sedek; Matthew Cullen; A W Langerak; Alexandre de Mendonça; E Macintyre; Marta Martin-Ayuso; Ondřej Hrušák; M B Vidriales; Alberto Orfao
Most consensus leukemia & lymphoma antibody panels consist of lists of markers based on expert opinions, but they have not been validated. Here we present the validated EuroFlow 8-color antibody panels for immunophenotyping of hematological malignancies. The single-tube screening panels and multi-tube classification panels fit into the EuroFlow diagnostic algorithm with entries defined by clinical and laboratory parameters. The panels were constructed in 2–7 sequential design–evaluation–redesign rounds, using novel Infinicyt software tools for multivariate data analysis. Two groups of markers are combined in each 8-color tube: (i) backbone markers to identify distinct cell populations in a sample, and (ii) markers for characterization of specific cell populations. In multi-tube panels, the backbone markers were optimally placed at the same fluorochrome position in every tube, to provide identical multidimensional localization of the target cell population(s). The characterization markers were positioned according to the diagnostic utility of the combined markers. Each proposed antibody combination was tested against reference databases of normal and malignant cells from healthy subjects and WHO-based disease entities, respectively. The EuroFlow studies resulted in validated and flexible 8-color antibody panels for multidimensional identification and characterization of normal and aberrant cells, optimally suited for immunophenotypic screening and classification of hematological malignancies.
Leukemia | 2012
Tomáš Kalina; Juan Flores-Montero; V H J van der Velden; Marta Martin-Ayuso; S Böttcher; Matthias Ritgen; Julia Almeida; L Lhermitte; Vahid Asnafi; Alexandre de Mendonça; R de Tute; Matthew Cullen; Lukasz Sedek; M B Vidriales; José Juan Pérez; J G te Marvelde; Ester Mejstrikova; Ondřej Hrušák; T Szczepa nacute; ski; J J M van Dongen; Alberto Orfao
The EU-supported EuroFlow Consortium aimed at innovation and standardization of immunophenotyping for diagnosis and classification of hematological malignancies by introducing 8-color flow cytometry with fully standardized laboratory procedures and antibody panels in order to achieve maximally comparable results among different laboratories. This required the selection of optimal combinations of compatible fluorochromes and the design and evaluation of adequate standard operating procedures (SOPs) for instrument setup, fluorescence compensation and sample preparation. Additionally, we developed software tools for the evaluation of individual antibody reagents and antibody panels. Each section describes what has been evaluated experimentally versus adopted based on existing data and experience. Multicentric evaluation demonstrated high levels of reproducibility based on strict implementation of the EuroFlow SOPs and antibody panels. Overall, the 6 years of extensive collaborative experiments and the analysis of hundreds of cell samples of patients and healthy controls in the EuroFlow centers have provided for the first time laboratory protocols and software tools for fully standardized 8-color flow cytometric immunophenotyping of normal and malignant leukocytes in bone marrow and blood; this has yielded highly comparable data sets, which can be integrated in a single database.
International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2009
Ewelina Szliszka; Zenon P. Czuba; Bogdan Mazur; Lukasz Sedek; Andrzej Paradysz; Wojciech Król
Chalcones exhibit chemopreventive and antitumor effects. Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) is a naturally occurring anticancer agent that induces apoptosis in cancer cells and is not toxic to normal cells. We examined the cytotoxic and apoptotic effect of five chalcones in combination with TRAIL on prostate cancer cells. The cytotoxicity was evaluated by the MTT and LDH assays. The apoptosis was determined using flow cytometry with annexin V-FITC. Our study showed that all five tested chalcones: chalcone, licochalcone-A, isobavachalcone, xanthohumol, butein markedly augmented TRAIL-mediated apoptosis and cytotoxicity in prostate cancer cells and confirmed the significant role of chalcones in chemoprevention of prostate cancer.
Leukemia | 2009
Floor Weerkamp; E Dekking; Y Y Ng; V H J van der Velden; H Wai; S Böttcher; Monika Brüggemann; A J van der Sluijs; A Koning; Nancy Boeckx; N Van Poecke; Paulo Lúcio; A Mendonça; Lukasz Sedek; T Szczepa nacute; ski; Tomáš Kalina; M. Kovac; Patricia G. Hoogeveen; Juan Flores-Montero; Alberto Orfao; Elizabeth Macintyre; L Lhermitte; R Chen; K. A. J. Brouwer-De Cock; Ah van der Linden; A L Noordijk; W.M. Comans-Bitter; Frank J. T. Staal; J J M van Dongen
BCR–ABL fusion proteins show increased signaling through their ABL tyrosine kinase domain, which can be blocked by specific inhibitors, thereby providing effective treatment. This makes detection of BCR–ABL aberrations of utmost importance for diagnosis, classification and treatment of leukemia patients. BCR–ABL aberrations are currently detected by karyotyping, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) or PCR techniques, which are time consuming and require specialized facilities. We developed a simple flow cytometric immunobead assay for detection of BCR–ABL fusion proteins in cell lysates, using a bead-bound anti-BCR catching antibody and a fluorochrome-conjugated anti-ABL detection antibody. We noticed protein stability problems in lysates caused by proteases from mature myeloid cells. This problem could largely be solved by adding protease inhibitors in several steps of the immunobead assay. Testing of 145 patient samples showed fully concordant results between the BCR–ABL immunobead assay and reverse transcriptase PCR of fusion gene transcripts. Dilution experiments with BCR–ABL positive cell lines revealed sensitivities of at least 1%. We conclude that the BCR–ABL immunobead assay detects all types of BCR–ABL proteins in leukemic cells with high specificity and sensitivity. The assay does not need specialized laboratory facilities other than a flow cytometer, provides results within ∼4 h, and can be run in parallel to routine immunophenotyping.
Leukemia | 2017
Juan Flores-Montero; Luzalba Sanoja-Flores; Bruno Paiva; Noemi Puig; O García-Sánchez; S Böttcher; V H J van der Velden; J-J Pérez-Morán; M B Vidriales; Ramón García-Sanz; Cristina Jiménez; González M; Joaquin Martinez-Lopez; A Corral-Mateos; G-E Grigore; R Fluxá; R Pontes; J Caetano; Lukasz Sedek; M-C del Cañizo; J. Bladé; J-J Lahuerta; Carlos Aguilar; Abelardo Bárez; A García-Mateo; Jorge Labrador; P Leoz; C Aguilera-Sanz; Jesús F. San-Miguel; M.V. Mateos
Flow cytometry has become a highly valuable method to monitor minimal residual disease (MRD) and evaluate the depth of complete response (CR) in bone marrow (BM) of multiple myeloma (MM) after therapy. However, current flow-MRD has lower sensitivity than molecular methods and lacks standardization. Here we report on a novel next generation flow (NGF) approach for highly sensitive and standardized MRD detection in MM. An optimized 2-tube 8-color antibody panel was constructed in five cycles of design-evaluation-redesign. In addition, a bulk-lysis procedure was established for acquisition of ⩾107 cells/sample, and novel software tools were constructed for automatic plasma cell gating. Multicenter evaluation of 110 follow-up BM from MM patients in very good partial response (VGPR) or CR showed a higher sensitivity for NGF-MRD vs conventional 8-color flow-MRD -MRD-positive rate of 47 vs 34% (P=0.003)-. Thus, 25% of patients classified as MRD-negative by conventional 8-color flow were MRD-positive by NGF, translating into a significantly longer progression-free survival for MRD-negative vs MRD-positive CR patients by NGF (75% progression-free survival not reached vs 7 months; P=0.02). This study establishes EuroFlow-based NGF as a highly sensitive, fully standardized approach for MRD detection in MM which overcomes the major limitations of conventional flow-MRD methods and is ready for implementation in routine diagnostics.
Blood | 2017
Prisca Theunissen; Ester Mejstrikova; Lukasz Sedek; Alita J. van der Sluijs-Gelling; Giuseppe Gaipa; Marius Bartels; Elaine Sobral da Costa; Michaela Kotrova; Michaela Novakova; Edwin Sonneveld; Chiara Buracchi; Paola Bonaccorso; Elen Oliveira; Jeroen G. te Marvelde; Tomasz Szczepański; L Lhermitte; Ondrej Hrusak; Quentin Lecrevisse; Georgiana Grigore; Eva Froňková; Jan Trka; Monika Brüggemann; Alberto Orfao; Jacques J.M. van Dongen; V H J van der Velden
A fully-standardized EuroFlow 8-color antibody panel and laboratory procedure was stepwise designed to measure minimal residual disease (MRD) in B-cell precursor (BCP) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients with a sensitivity of ≤10-5, comparable to real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RQ-PCR)-based MRD detection via antigen-receptor rearrangements. Leukocyte markers and the corresponding antibodies and fluorochromes were selected based on their contribution in separating BCP-ALL cells from normal/regenerating BCP cells in multidimensional principal component analyses. After 5 multicenter design-test-evaluate-redesign phases with a total of 319 BCP-ALL patients at diagnosis, two 8-color antibody tubes were selected, which allowed separation between normal and malignant BCP cells in 99% of studied patients. These 2 tubes were tested with a new erythrocyte bulk-lysis protocol allowing acquisition of high cell numbers in 377 bone marrow follow-up samples of 178 BCP-ALL patients. Comparison with RQ-PCR-based MRD data showed a clear positive relation between the percentage concordant cases and the number of cells acquired. For those samples with >4 million cells acquired, concordant results were obtained in 93% of samples. Most discordances were clarified upon high-throughput sequencing of antigen-receptor rearrangements and blind multicenter reanalysis of flow cytometric data, resulting in an unprecedented concordance of 98% (97% for samples with MRD < 0.01%). In conclusion, the fully standardized EuroFlow BCP-ALL MRD strategy is applicable in >98% of patients with sensitivities at least similar to RQ-PCR (≤10-5), if sufficient cells (>4 × 106, preferably more) are evaluated.
Blood | 2013
Paulina Mirkowska; Andreas Hofmann; Lukasz Sedek; Lucie Slamova; Ester Mejstrikova; Tomasz Szczepański; Maike Schmitz; Gunnar Cario; Martin Stanulla; Martin Schrappe; V H J van der Velden; Beat C. Bornhauser; Bernd Wollscheid; Jean-Pierre Bourquin
A better description of the leukemia cell surface proteome (surfaceome) is a prerequisite for the development of diagnostic and therapeutic tools. Insights into the complexity of the surfaceome have been limited by the lack of suitable methodologies. We combined a leukemia xenograft model with the discovery-driven chemoproteomic Cell Surface Capture technology to explore the B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) surfaceome; 713 cell surface proteins, including 181 CD proteins, were detected through combined analysis of 19 BCP-ALL cases. Diagnostic immunophenotypes were recapitulated in each case, and subtype specific markers were detected. To identify new leukemia-associated markers, we filtered the surfaceome data set against gene expression information from sorted, normal hematopoietic cells. Nine candidate markers (CD18, CD63, CD31, CD97, CD102, CD157, CD217, CD305, and CD317) were validated by flow cytometry in patient samples at diagnosis and during chemotherapy. CD97, CD157, CD63, and CD305 accounted for the most informative differences between normal and malignant cells. The ALL surfaceome constitutes a valuable resource to assist the functional exploration of surface markers in normal and malignant lymphopoiesis. This unbiased approach will also contribute to the development of strategies that rely on complex information for multidimensional flow cytometry data analysis to improve its diagnostic applications.
Leukemia | 2012
E Dekking; V H J van der Velden; R Varro; H Wai; S Böttcher; Michael Kneba; Edwin Sonneveld; A Koning; Nancy Boeckx; N Van Poecke; Paulo Lúcio; Alexandre de Mendonça; Lukasz Sedek; T Szczepanski; Tomáš Kalina; Veronika Kanderová; Patricia G. Hoogeveen; Juan Flores-Montero; M C Chillón; Alberto Orfao; Julia Almeida; Paul Anthony Stuart Evans; Matthew Cullen; A L Noordijk; P M Vermeulen; M T de Man; E P Dixon; W.M. Comans-Bitter; J J M van Dongen
The PML–RARA fusion protein is found in approximately 97% of patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). APL can be associated with life-threatening bleeding complications when undiagnosed and not treated expeditiously. The PML–RARA fusion protein arrests maturation of myeloid cells at the promyelocytic stage, leading to the accumulation of neoplastic promyelocytes. Complete remission can be obtained by treatment with all-trans-retinoic acid (ATRA) in combination with chemotherapy. Diagnosis of APL is based on the detection of t(15;17) by karyotyping, fluorescence in situ hybridization or PCR. These techniques are laborious and demand specialized laboratories. We developed a fast (performed within 4–5 h) and sensitive (detection of at least 10% malignant cells in normal background) flow cytometric immunobead assay for the detection of PML–RARA fusion proteins in cell lysates using a bead-bound anti-RARA capture antibody and a phycoerythrin-conjugated anti-PML detection antibody. Testing of 163 newly diagnosed patients (including 46 APL cases) with the PML–RARA immunobead assay showed full concordance with the PML–RARA PCR results. As the applied antibodies recognize outer domains of the fusion protein, the assay appeared to work independently of the PML gene break point region. Importantly, the assay can be used in parallel with routine immunophenotyping for fast and easy diagnosis of APL.
Best Practice & Research Clinical Haematology | 2010
E Dekking; V H J van der Velden; S Böttcher; Monika Brüggemann; Edwin Sonneveld; A. Koning-Goedheer; Nancy Boeckx; Paulo Lúcio; Lukasz Sedek; Tomasz Szczepański; Tomáš Kalina; M. Kovac; Paul Anthony Stuart Evans; Patricia G. Hoogeveen; Juan Flores-Montero; Alberto Orfao; W.M. Comans-Bitter; F J T Staal; J J M van Dongen
Nowadays, the presence of specific genetic aberrations is progressively used for classification and treatment stratification, because acute leukemias with the same oncogenetic aberration generally form a clinically and diagnostically homogenous disease entity with comparable prognosis. Many oncogenetic aberrations in acute leukemias result in a fusion gene, which is transcribed into fusion transcripts and translated into fusion proteins, which are assumed to play a critical role in the oncogenetic process. Fusion gene aberrations are detected by karyotyping, FISH, or RT-PCR analysis. However, these molecular genetic techniques are laborious and time consuming, which is in contrast to flow cytometric techniques. Therefore we developed a flow cytometric immunobead assay for detection of fusion proteins in lysates of leukemia cell samples by use of a bead-bound catching antibody against one side of the fusion protein and fluorochrome-conjugated detection antibody. So far, we have been able to design such fusion protein immunobead assays for BCR-ABL, PML-RARA, TEL-AML1, E2A-PBX1, MLL-AF4, AML1-ETO and CBFB-MYH11. The immunobead assay for detection of fusion proteins can be performed within 3 to 4 hours in a routine diagnostic setting, without the need of special equipment other than a flow cytometer. The novel immunobead assay will enable fast and easy classification of acute leukemia patients that express fusion proteins. Such patients can be included at an early stage in the right treatment protocols, much faster than by use of current molecular techniques. The immunobead assay can be run in parallel to routine immunophenotyping and is particularly attractive for clinical settings without direct access to molecular diagnostics.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2017
Marcin Braun; Agata Pastorczak; Wojciech Fendler; Joanna Madzio; Bartłomiej Tomasik; Joanna Taha; Marta Bielska; Lukasz Sedek; Tomasz Szczepański; Michał Matysiak; Katarzyna Derwich; Monika Lejman; Jerzy Kowalczyk; Bernarda Kazanowska; Wanda Badowska; Jan Styczynski; Nina Irga-Jaworska; Joanna Trelinska; Beata Zalewska-Szewczyk; Filip Pierlejewski; Iwona Wlodarska; Wojciech Mlynarski
Abstract The inactivation of tumor suppressor genes located within 9p21 locus (CDKN2A, CDKN2B) occurs in up to 30% of children with B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL), but its independent prognostic significance remains controversial. In order to investigate the prognostic impact of deletions and promoter methylation within 9p21, 641 children with newly diagnosed BCP-ALL using methylation specific multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MS-MLPA) were investigated. A total of 169 (26.4%) microdeletions in 9p21 were detected, of which 71 were homozygous. Patients with CDKN2A homozygous deletions were older at diagnosis (p < .001), more frequently steroid resistant (p = .049), had higher WBC count (p < .001), higher MRD at Day 15 (p = .013) and lower relapse-free survival [p = .028, hazard ratio: 2.28 (95% confidence interval: 1.09–4.76)] than patients without these alterations. CDKN2A homozygous deletions coexisted with IKZF1 and PAX5 deletions (p < .001). In conclusion, CDKN2A homozygous deletions, but not promoter methylation, are associated with poor response to treatment and increased relapse risk of pediatric BCP-ALL.