| Literature DB >> 26202931 |
J M Boer1, A van der Veer1, D Rizopoulos2, M Fiocco3,4, E Sonneveld3, H A de Groot-Kruseman3, R P Kuiper5, P Hoogerbrugge3,6, M Horstmann7, M Zaliova8,9, C Palmi10, J Trka9, E Fronkova9, M Emerenciano11, M do Socorro Pombo-de-Oliveira11, W Mlynarski12, T Szczepanski13, K Nebral14, A Attarbaschi15, N Venn16, R Sutton16, C J Schwab17, A Enshaei17, A Vora18, M Stanulla19, M Schrappe8, G Cazzaniga10, V Conter10, M Zimmermann19, A V Moorman17, R Pieters1,3,6, M L den Boer1,3.
Abstract
Deletions in IKZF1 are found in ~15% of children with B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL). There is strong evidence for the poor prognosis of IKZF1 deletions affecting exons 4-7 and exons 1-8, but evidence for the remaining 33% of cases harboring other variants of IKZF1 deletions is lacking. In an international multicenter study we analyzed the prognostic value of these rare variants in a case-control design. Each IKZF1-deleted case was matched to three IKZF1 wild-type controls based on cytogenetic subtype, treatment protocol, risk stratification arm, white blood cell count and age. Hazard ratios for the prognostic impact of rare IKZF1 deletions on event-free survival were calculated by matched pair Cox regression. Matched pair analysis for all 134 cases with rare IKZF1 deletions together revealed a poor prognosis (P<0.001) that was evident in each risk stratification arm. Rare variant types with the most unfavorable event-free survival were DEL 2-7 (P=0.03), DEL 2-8 (P=0.002) and DEL-Other (P<0.001). The prognosis of each type of rare variant was equal or worse compared with the well-known major DEL 4-7 and DEL 1-8 IKZF1 deletion variants. We therefore conclude that all variants of rare IKZF1 deletions are associated with an unfavorable prognosis in pediatric BCP-ALL.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26202931 DOI: 10.1038/leu.2015.199
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leukemia ISSN: 0887-6924 Impact factor: 11.528