| Literature DB >> 24923295 |
Tobias Herold1, Klaus H Metzeler1, Sebastian Vosberg1, Luise Hartmann1, Christoph Röllig2, Friedrich Stölzel3, Stephanie Schneider4, Max Hubmann5, Evelyn Zellmeier4, Bianka Ksienzyk4, Vindi Jurinovic6, Zlatana Pasalic4, Purvi M Kakadia7, Annika Dufour4, Alexander Graf8, Stefan Krebs8, Helmut Blum8, Maria Cristina Sauerland9, Thomas Büchner10, Wolfgang E Berdel10, Bernhard J Woermann11, Martin Bornhäuser2, Gerhard Ehninger2, Ulrich Mansmann12, Wolfgang Hiddemann1, Stefan K Bohlander13, Karsten Spiekermann1, Philipp A Greif1.
Abstract
In acute myeloid leukemia (AML), isolated trisomy 13 (AML+13) is a rare chromosomal abnormality whose prognostic relevance is poorly characterized. We analyzed the clinical course of 34 AML+13 patients enrolled in the German AMLCG-1999 and SAL trials and performed exome sequencing, targeted candidate gene sequencing and gene expression profiling. Relapse-free (RFS) and overall survival (OS) of AML+13 patients were inferior compared to other ELN Intermediate-II patients (n=855) (median RFS, 7.8 vs 14.1 months, P = .006; median OS 9.3 vs. 14.8 months, P = .004). Besides the known high frequency of RUNX1 mutations (75%), we identified mutations in spliceosome components in 88%, including SRSF2 codon 95 mutations in 81%. Recurring mutations were detected in ASXL1 (44%) and BCOR (25%). Two patients carried mutations in CEBPZ, suggesting that CEBPZ is a novel recurrently mutated gene in AML. Gene expression analysis revealed a homogeneous expression profile including upregulation of FOXO1 and FLT3 and downregulation of SPRY2. This is the most comprehensive clinical and biological characterization of AML+13 to date, and reveals a striking clustering of lesions in a few genes, defining AML+13 as a genetically homogeneous subgroup with alterations in a few critical cellular pathways. Clinicaltrials.gov identifiers: AMLCG-1999: NCT00266136; AML96: NCT00180115; AML2003: NCT00180102; and AML60+: NCT00893373.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24923295 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2013-12-540716
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113