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Dive into the research topics where Veli Kairisto is active.

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Featured researches published by Veli Kairisto.


Blood | 2009

Comparison of imatinib 400 mg and 800 mg daily in the front-line treatment of high-risk, Philadelphia-positive chronic myeloid leukemia: a European LeukemiaNet Study

Michele Baccarani; Gianantonio Rosti; Fausto Castagnetti; Ibrahim C. Haznedaroglu; Kimmo Porkka; Elisabetta Abruzzese; Giuliana Alimena; Hans Ehrencrona; Henrik Hjorth-Hansen; Veli Kairisto; Luciano Levato; Giovanni Martinelli; Arnon Nagler; Johan Lanng Nielsen; Ugur Ozbek; Francesca Palandri; Fausto Palmieri; Fabrizio Pane; Giovanna Rege-Cambrin; Domenico Russo; Giorgina Specchia; Nicoletta Testoni; Ole Weiss-Bjerrum; Giuseppe Saglio; Bengt Simonsson

Imatinib mesylate (IM), 400 mg daily, is the standard treatment of Philadelphia-positive (Ph(+)) chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). Preclinical data and results of single-arm studies raised the suggestion that better results could be achieved with a higher dose. To investigate whether the systematic use of a higher dose of IM could lead to better results, 216 patients with Ph(+) CML at high risk (HR) according to the Sokal index were randomly assigned to receive IM 800 mg or 400 mg daily, as front-line therapy, for at least 1 year. The CCgR rate at 1 year was 64% and 58% for the high-dose arm and for the standard-dose arm, respectively (P = .435). No differences were detectable in the CgR at 3 and 6 months, in the molecular response rate at any time, as well as in the rate of other events. Twenty-four (94%) of 25 patients who could tolerate the full 800-mg dose achieved a CCgR, and only 4 (23%) of 17 patients who could tolerate less than 350 mg achieved a CCgR. This study does not support the extensive use of high-dose IM (800 mg daily) front-line in all CML HR patients. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00514488.


Blood | 2011

Combination of pegylated IFN-alpha 2b with imatinib increases molecular response rates in patients with low- or intermediate-risk chronic myeloid leukemia

Bengt Simonsson; Tobias Gedde-Dahl; Berit Markevärn; Kari Remes; Jesper Stentoft; Anders Almqvist; Mats Björeman; Max Flogegård; Perttu Koskenvesa; Anders Lindblom; Claes Malm; Satu Mustjoki; Kristina Myhr-Eriksson; Lotta Ohm; Anu Räsänen; Marjatta Sinisalo; Anders Själander; Ulla Strömberg; Ole Weiss Bjerrum; Hans Ehrencrona; Franz X. Gruber; Veli Kairisto; Karin Olsson; Fredrik Sandin; Arnon Nagler; Johan Lanng Nielsen; Henrik Hjorth-Hansen; Kimmo Porkka

Biologic and clinical observations suggest that combining imatinib with IFN-α may improve treatment outcome in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). We randomized newly diagnosed chronic-phase CML patients with a low or intermediate Sokal risk score and in imatinib-induced complete hematologic remission either to receive a combination of pegylated IFN-α2b (Peg-IFN-α2b) 50 μg weekly and imatinib 400 mg daily (n = 56) or to receive imatinib 400 mg daily monotherapy (n = 56). The primary endpoint was the major molecular response (MMR) rate at 12 months after randomization. In both arms, 4 patients (7%) discontinued imatinib treatment (1 because of blastic transformation in imatinib arm). In addition, in the combination arm, 34 patients (61%) discontinued Peg-IFN-α2b, most because of toxicity. The MMR rate at 12 months was significantly higher in the imatinib plus Peg-IFN-α2b arm (82%) compared with the imatinib monotherapy arm (54%; intention-to-treat, P = .002). The MMR rate increased with the duration of Peg-IFN-α2b treatment (< 12-week MMR rate 67%, > 12-week MMR rate 91%). Thus, the addition of even relatively short periods of Peg-IFN-α2b to imatinib markedly increased the MMR rate at 12 months of therapy. Lower doses of Peg-IFN-α2b may enhance tolerability while retaining efficacy and could be considered in future protocols with curative intent.


Blood | 2010

Mono/oligoclonal T and NK cells are common in chronic myeloid leukemia patients at diagnosis and expand during dasatinib therapy

Anna Kreutzman; Vesa Juvonen; Veli Kairisto; Marja Ekblom; Leif Stenke; Ruth Seggewiss; Kimmo Porkka; Satu Mustjoki

In a proportion of patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) being treated with dasatinib, we recently observed large granular lymphocyte (LGL) expansions carrying clonal T-cell receptor (TCR) gamma/delta gene rearrangements. To assess the prevalence and role of clonal lymphocytes in CML, we collected samples from patients (n = 34) at the time of diagnosis and during imatinib and dasatinib therapies and analyzed lymphocyte clonality with a sensitive polymerase chain reaction-based method of TCR gamma and delta genes. Surprisingly, at CML diagnosis, 15 of 18 patients (83%) had a sizeable clonal, BCR-ABL1 negative lymphocyte population, which was uncommon in healthy persons (1 of 12; 8%). The same clone persisted at low levels in most imatinib-treated patients. In contrast, in a distinct population of dasatinib-treated patients, the diagnostic phase clone markedly expanded, resulting in absolute lymphocytosis in blood. Most patients with LGL expansions (90%) had TCR delta rearrangements, which were uncommon in patients without an LGL expansion (10%). The TCR delta clones were confined to gammadelta(+) T- or natural killer-cell compartments and the TCR gamma clones to CD4(+)/CD8(+) alphabeta(+) fractions. The functional importance of clonal lymphocytes as a part of leukemia immune surveillance and the putative anergy-reversing role of dasatinib require further evaluation.


Blood | 2010

Establishment of the first World Health Organization International Genetic Reference Panel for quantitation of BCR-ABL mRNA.

Helen E. White; Paul Matejtschuk; Peter Rigsby; Jean Gabert; Feng Lin; Y. Lynn Wang; Susan Branford; Martin C. Müller; Nathalie Beaufils; Emmanuel Beillard; Dolors Colomer; Dana Dvorakova; Hans Ehrencrona; Hyun Gyung Goh; Hakim El Housni; Dan Jones; Veli Kairisto; Suzanne Kamel-Reid; Dong-Wook Kim; Stephen E. Langabeer; Edmond S. K. Ma; Richard D. Press; Giuliana Romeo; Lihui Wang; Katerina Zoi; Timothy P. Hughes; Giuseppe Saglio; Andreas Hochhaus; John M. Goldman; Paul Metcalfe

Serial quantitation of BCR-ABL mRNA levels is an important indicator of therapeutic response for patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia and Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia, but there is substantial variation in the real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction methodologies used by different testing laboratories. To help improve the comparability of results between centers we sought to develop accredited reference reagents that are directly linked to the BCR-ABL international scale. After assessment of candidate cell lines, a reference material panel comprising 4 different dilution levels of freeze-dried preparations of K562 cells diluted in HL60 cells was prepared. After performance evaluation, the materials were assigned fixed percent BCR-ABL/control gene values according to the International Scale. A recommendation that the 4 materials be established as the first World Health Organization International Genetic Reference Panel for quantitation of BCR-ABL translocation by real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction was approved by the Expert Committee on Biological Standardization of the World Health Organization in November 2009. We consider that the development of these reagents is a significant milestone in the standardization of this clinically important test, but because they are a limited resource we suggest that their availability is restricted to manufacturers of secondary reference materials.


Leukemia | 2015

A certified plasmid reference material for the standardisation of BCR–ABL1 mRNA quantification by real-time quantitative PCR

H White; L Deprez; P Corbisier; Victoria J. Hall; F Lin; S Mazoua; S Trapmann; A Aggerholm; H. Andrikovics; Susanna Akiki; Gisela Barbany; Nancy Boeckx; Anthony J. Bench; Mark A. Catherwood; J-M Cayuela; S Chudleigh; Tim Clench; Dolors Colomer; Filomena Daraio; S Dulucq; J Farrugia; Linda Fletcher; Letizia Foroni; R Ganderton; Gareth Gerrard; E Gineikienė; Sandrine Hayette; H El Housni; Barbara Izzo; M Jansson

Serial quantification of BCR–ABL1 mRNA is an important therapeutic indicator in chronic myeloid leukaemia, but there is a substantial variation in results reported by different laboratories. To improve comparability, an internationally accepted plasmid certified reference material (CRM) was developed according to ISO Guide 34:2009. Fragments of BCR–ABL1 (e14a2 mRNA fusion), BCR and GUSB transcripts were amplified and cloned into pUC18 to yield plasmid pIRMM0099. Six different linearised plasmid solutions were produced with the following copy number concentrations, assigned by digital PCR, and expanded uncertainties: 1.08±0.13 × 106, 1.08±0.11 × 105, 1.03±0.10 × 104, 1.02±0.09 × 103, 1.04±0.10 × 102 and 10.0±1.5 copies/μl. The certification of the material for the number of specific DNA fragments per plasmid, copy number concentration of the plasmid solutions and the assessment of inter-unit heterogeneity and stability were performed according to ISO Guide 35:2006. Two suitability studies performed by 63 BCR–ABL1 testing laboratories demonstrated that this set of 6 plasmid CRMs can help to standardise a number of measured transcripts of e14a2 BCR–ABL1 and three control genes (ABL1, BCR and GUSB). The set of six plasmid CRMs is distributed worldwide by the Institute for Reference Materials and Measurements (Belgium) and its authorised distributors (https://ec.europa.eu/jrc/en/reference-materials/catalogue/; CRM code ERM-AD623a-f).


European Journal of Haematology | 2010

Depth of response assessed by quantitative ASO-PCR predicts the outcome after stem cell transplantation in multiple myeloma

Mervi Putkonen; Veli Kairisto; Vesa Juvonen; Tarja-Terttu Pelliniemi; Auvo Rauhala; Maija Itälä-Remes; Kari Remes

Achievement of complete response (CR) is a new goal of therapy for multiple myeloma (MM). By sensitive methods, the depth of response can be measured even among the patients in CR. We used a sensitive real‐time quantitative polymerase chain reaction by allele‐specific primers (qASO‐PCR) to assess the level of minimal residual disease (MRD) in bone marrow of 37 patients with myeloma who had achieved CR/near‐to‐CR after autologous or allogeneic stem cell transplantation (SCT). Allele‐specific primers could be successfully designed for 86% of patients. Three to six months after autotransplantation, the PCR target was not detectable in 53% of patients (16/30 patients), and the respective figure after allotransplantation was 71% (5/7 patients); the median sensitivity of PCR assay was <0.002%. The proportion of patients without detectable PCR target was 22% of all autotransplanted patients. A threshold level of 0.01% in the qASO‐PCR assay 3–6 months after SCT was found to be a useful cut‐off limit to divide the patients into two prognostic groups: MRD low/negative vs. MRD high. Low/negative MRD after SCT was a significant predictive factor for the prolongation of progression free (70 vs. 19 months; P = 0.003) and suggestively also for overall survival. We conclude that not only CR but also its depth is important for the long‐term outcome in MM.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Chronic Myeloid Leukemia Patients in Prolonged Remission following Interferon-α Monotherapy Have Distinct Cytokine and Oligoclonal Lymphocyte Profile

Anna Kreutzman; Peter Rohon; Edgar Faber; Karel Indrak; Vesa Juvonen; Veli Kairisto; Jaroslava Voglová; Marjatta Sinisalo; Emilia Flochova; Jukka Vakkila; Petteri Arstila; Kimmo Porkka; Satu Mustjoki

Before the era of tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), interferon-alpha (IFN-α) was the treatment of choice in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). Curiously, some IFN-α treated patients were able to discontinue therapy without disease progression. The aim of this project was to study the immunomodulatory effects of IFN-α in CML patients in prolonged remission and isolate biological markers predicting response. Due to rarity of patients on IFN-α monotherapy, a relatively small cohort of patients still on treatment (IFN-ON, n = 10, median therapy duration 11.8 years) or had discontinued IFN-α therapy but remained in remission for >2 years (IFN-OFF, n = 9) were studied. The lymphocyte immunophenotype was analyzed with a comprehensive flow cytometry panel and plasma cytokine levels were measured with multiplex bead-based assay. In addition, the clonality status of different lymphocyte subpopulations was analyzed by TCR γ/δ rearrangement assay. Median NK-cell absolute number and proportion from lymphocytes in blood was higher in IFN-OFF patients as compared to IFN-ON patients or controls (0.42, 0.19, 0.21×109/L; 26%, 12%, 11%, respectively, p<0.001). The proportion of CD8+ T-cells was significantly increased in both patient groups and a larger proportion of T-cells expressed CD45RO. Most (95%) patients had significant numbers of oligoclonal lymphocytes characterized by T-cell receptor γ/δ rearrangements. Strikingly, in the majority of patients (79%) a distinct clonal Vγ9 gene rearrangement was observed residing in γδ+ T-cell population. Similar unique clonality pattern was not observed in TKI treated CML patients. Plasma eotaxin and MCP-1 cytokines were significantly increased in IFN-OFF patients. Despite the limited number of patients, our data indicates that IFN-α treated CML patients in remission have increased numbers of NK-cells and clonal γδ+ T-cells and a unique plasma cytokine profile. These factors may relate to anti-leukemic effects of IFN-α in this specific group of patients and account for prolonged therapy responses even after drug discontinuation.


Leukemia | 2007

Characterization of a reference material for BCR-ABL (M-BCR) mRNA quantitation by real-time amplification assays: towards new standards for gene expression measurements

J Saldanha; M Silvy; N Beaufils; R Arlinghaus; Gisela Barbany; Susan Branford; Jean-Michel Cayuela; G Cazzaniga; Marcos González; David Grimwade; Veli Kairisto; K Miyamura; Mark Lawler; Thomas Lion; E Macintyre; F X Mahon; M C Muller; Mette Østergaard; Heike Pfeifer; G. Saglio; Charles L. Sawyers; Orietta Spinelli; V H J van der Velden; J Q Wang; K Zoi; V Patel; P Phillips; P Matejtschuk; Jean Gabert

Monitoring of BCR-ABL transcripts has become established practice in the management of chronic myeloid leukemia. However, nucleic acid amplification techniques are prone to variations which limit the reliability of real-time quantitative PCR (RQ-PCR) for clinical decision making, highlighting the need for standardization of assays and reporting of minimal residual disease (MRD) data. We evaluated a lyophilized preparation of a leukemic cell line (K562) as a potential quality control reagent. This was found to be relatively stable, yielding comparable respective levels of ABL, GUS and BCR-ABL transcripts as determined by RQ-PCR before and after accelerated degradation experiments as well as following 5 years storage at −20°C. Vials of freeze-dried cells were sent at ambient temperature to 22 laboratories on four continents, with RQ-PCR analyses detecting BCR-ABL transcripts at levels comparable to those observed in primary patient samples. Our results suggest that freeze-dried cells can be used as quality control reagents with a range of analytical instrumentations and could enable the development of urgently needed international standards simulating clinically relevant levels of MRD.


Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine | 1998

Biological Day-to-Day Variation and Daytime Changes of Testosterone, Follitropin, Lutropin and Oestradiol-17β in Healthy Men

Outi Ahokoski; Arja Virtanen; Risto Huupponen; Harry Scheinin; Eeva Salminen; Veli Kairisto; Kerttu Irjala

Abstract Information on biological day-to-day variation is needed for detecting within-subject changes over time. In this study the daytime changes and the biological day-to-day variation of serum testosterone, follitropin, lutropin and oestradiol-17β concentrations were investigated in 31 healthy males. To analyse daytime changes, blood specimens were taken at 0800 h, 1200 h, 1600 h and 2000 h during one day (n=31) and two days (n=8). The day-to-day variation was analysed from blood specimens collected at 0800 h on days 1 and 2 (n=31) and additionally on days 3, 4, 6 and 9 (n=8). The evaluation of the day-to-day variation was based on calculations of the within-subject (CVA+I) and between-subject (CVG) coefficients of variation. When the within-subject day-to-day variances were not too heterogeneous, they were used for the calculation of 95 % reference change limits. Serum testosterone and oestradiol-17βconcentrations showed a significant daytime variation; testosterone had higher serum concentrations at 0800 and 1200 h. A peak in the serum concentration of oestradiol-17β occurred at 1200 h with a decrease towards the evening. There were no clear daytime changes in the serum concentrations of follitropin or lutropin. For different analytes the reference change limits were: serum testosterone ± 32.0 %, serum follitropin ± 24.1 % and serum oestradiol-17β ± 38.3 %. The reference change limit was not calculated for serum lutropin, as a high degree of heterogeneity and individuality was found. The interpretation of the results of hormone measurements requires recognition of the biological daytime and day-to-day changes of hormones. The reference change limits determine what changes are significant when monitoring the patient.


Leukemia | 2011

Development of standardized approaches to reporting of minimal residual disease data using a reporting software package designed within the European LeukemiaNet

Mette Østergaard; Charlotte Guldborg Nyvold; Jelena V. Jovanovic; M T Andersen; Veli Kairisto; Y G Morgan; K Tobal; Niels Pallisgaard; Ugur Ozbek; Heike Pfeifer; Susanne Schnittger; Lykke Grubach; Larsen Jk; David Grimwade; Peter Hokland

Quantitative PCR (qPCR) for detection of fusion transcripts and overexpressed genes is a promising tool for following minimal residual disease (MRD) in patients with hematological malignancies. Its widespread clinical use has to some extent been hampered by differences in data analysis and presentation that complicate multicenter clinical trials. To address these issues, we designed a highly flexible MRD-reporting software program, in which data from various qPCR platforms can be imported, processed, and presented in a uniform manner to generate intuitively understandable reports. The software was tested in a two-step quality control (QC) study; the first step involved eight centers, whose previous experience with the software ranged from none to extensive. The participants received cDNA from consecutive samples from a BCR-ABL+ chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patient and an acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patient with both CBFβ-MYH11 and WT1 target genes, they conducted qPCR on their respective hardware platforms and generated a series of reports with pre-defined features. In step two, five centers used the software to report BCR-ABL+ MRD in a harmonized manner, applying their recently obtained CML international scale conversion factors. The QC study demonstrated that this MRD-reporting software is suitable for efficient handling of qPCR data, generation of MRD reports and harmonization of MRD data.

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Vesa Juvonen

Turku University Hospital

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Arja Virtanen

Social Insurance Institution

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Henrik Hjorth-Hansen

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Kari Remes

Turku University Hospital

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