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Title: | High prevalence of relapse in Australian children with pH-like acute lymphoblastic leukemia despite risk adapted treatment | Authors: | Sadras, T. Moore, S. Law, T. Ng, A. Norris, M. D. Revesz, T. Osborn, M. P. Fraser, C. Alvaro, F. Marshall, G. M. Pozza, L. D. Hughes, T. P. Mullighan, C. G. Sutton, R. White, D. L. Heatley, S. L. Venn, N. C. Quek, K. Dang, P. Kok, C. H. Nievergall, E. |
Issue Date: | 2015 | Source: | 126, (23), 2015, p. 1419 | Pages: | 1419 | Journal: | Blood | Abstract: | Introduction: While remission rates for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) now exceed 80%, relapsed ALL remains the leading cause of non-traumatic death in children. Recently, a high-risk group of B-progenitor ALL patients has been identified. Such cases exhibit a gene expression profile similar to that of BCR-ABL1 positive (Ph+) ALL but are BCR-ABL1 negative, and also experience poor treatment outcomes. This subset, termed Ph-like ALL, is characterised by a range of genetic alterations that activate cytokine receptor and kinase signalling, allowing potential targeting by available tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI). The frequency of Ph-like ALL in the Australian community and the prognosis in the setting of the first MRD (minimal residual disease) intervention trial by the Australian and New Zealand Children's Haematology/Oncology Group (ANZCHOG ALL8) is unknown. Method: We retrospectively screened 250 unselected samples that were available from children diagnosed with B-ALL, for Ph-like ALL. The children, aged between 1 and 18 years, were enrolled on the ANZCHOG ALL8 trial and recruited from 2002-2011. The criteria for stratification to the high-risk group, based upon Berlin-Frankfurt-Munster (BFM) protocols, were BCR-ABL1 or MLL t(4;11) translocation; poor prednisolone response at day 8; failure to achieve remission by day 33 or high MRD (>5 x10-4) at day 79. MRD was measured by RQ-PCR for patient-specific immunoglobulin and T-cell receptor rearrangements. All patients received a standard BFM four drug induction chemotherapy regimen including a prednisolone pre-phase and intrathecal methotrexate. High-risk patients received a further three novel intensive blocks of chemotherapy followed by transplant in most cases. Patients were screened for Ph-like ALL using a custom Taqman Low Density Array (TLDA) based upon previous reports. Fusions were then confirmed by RT-PCR for 30 known fusions, Sanger sequencing, mRNA sequencing and/or FISH. Results: Ten percent (25/250) of children in this cohort were identified as having Ph-like ALL, with most fusions converging on kinase activating pathways (Table 1). Three Ph-like ALL patients were considered high-risk, the remaining 22 (88%) were medium risk. Five children with Ph-like ALL, that did not have a fusion identified by RT-PCR, are currently under further investigation. Furthermore, 15 of the 20 (75%) of rearrangements involved CRLF2 with 10 (66%) of these children relapsing. Strikingly, 56% (14/25) of children in the ALL8 cohort who were identified as Ph-like subsequently relapsed compared to 16% (36/225) who were not, with significantly worse event free survival (p<0.0001) (Figure 1). Conclusion: Here we demonstrate a significantly higher frequency of relapse amongst Australian children with Ph-like ALL compared to non Ph-like disease despite a MRD-adjusted intensification regimen. In this cohort, these children should be classified as high-risk due to high treatment failure rates with standard/medium risk regimens. Importantly, rapid identification of these patients may guide future intervention with targeted therapies, such as TKI, matched to the causative genetic lesion in this high-risk group. (Figure Presented).L721719632016-02-08 | Resources: | https://www.embase.com/search/results?subaction=viewrecord&id=L72171963&from=export | Keywords: | therapy;gene expression;treatment failure;event free survival;density;transplantation;high risk patient;intrathecal drug administration;induction chemotherapy;chemotherapy;prednisolonephosphotransferase;immunoglobulin;protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor;methotrexate;messenger RNA;T lymphocyte receptor;cytokine receptor;prevalence;relapse;Australian;child;human;pH;acute lymphoblastic leukemia;risk;American;society;hematology;patient;high risk population;remission;pre B lymphocyte;death;Germany;New Zealand;childhood;minimal residual disease;prognosis;community;treatment outcome;intervention study;stratification | Type: | Article |
Appears in Sites: | Children's Health Queensland Publications |
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