| Literature DB >> 28404889 |
Simona Luatti1, Carmen Baldazzi1, Giulia Marzocchi1, Gaia Ameli1, Maria Teresa Bochicchio1, Simona Soverini1, Fausto Castagnetti1, Mario Tiribelli2, Gabriele Gugliotta1, Giovanni Martinelli1, Michele Baccarani1, Michele Cavo1, Gianantonio Rosti1, Nicoletta Testoni1.
Abstract
At diagnosis, about 5% of Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) patients lacks Philadelphia chromosome (Ph), despite the presence of the BCR/ABL rearrangement. Two mechanisms have been proposed about the occurrence of this rearrangement: the first one is a cryptic insertion between chromosomes 9 and 22; the second one involves two sequential translocations: a classic t(9;22) followed by a reverse translocation, which reconstitutes the normal morphology of the partner chromosomes. Out of 398 newly diagnosed CML patients, we selected 12 Ph-negative cases. Six Ph-negative patients treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) were characterized, in order to study the mechanisms leading to the rearrangement and the eventual correlation with prognosis in treatment with TKIs. FISH analysis revealed cryptic insertion in 5 patients and classic translocation in the last one. In more detail, we observed 4 different patterns of rearrangement, suggesting high genetic heterogeneity of these patients. In our cases, the BCR/ABL rearrangement mapped more frequently on 9q34 region than on 22q11 region, in contrast to previous reports. Four patients, with low Sokal risk, achieved Complete Cytogenetic Response and/or Major Molecular Response after TKIs therapy. Therapy resistance was observed in one patient with duplication of BCR/ABL rearrangement and in another one with high risk. Even if the number patient is inevitably low, we can confirm that the rare Ph-negative CML patients do not constitute a "warning" category, meanwhile the presence of further cytogenetic abnormalities remains an adverse prognostic factor even in TKI era.Entities:
Keywords: BCR/ABL; CML; FISH; Philadelphia chromosome; TKI
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28404889 PMCID: PMC5444712 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.15369
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Ph-neg cases treated with imatinb and outcome reported in literature
| Case | Sex/Age (years) | Pattern FISH | del(9q) | Location of BCR/ABL rearrangement | Mechanism of rearrangement | Therapy | Cytogenetic response | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | unknown | 1R2G1F | NO | der(9) | Insertion on der(9) | imatinib | NR | Haigh S. et al, 2004 [ |
| 2 | unknown | 2R1G1F | NO | der(22) | Insertion on der(22) | imatinib | NR | Haigh S. et al, 2004 [ |
| 3 | unknown | 2R1G1F | NO | der(9) | 2-step mechanism | imatinib | NR | Haigh S. et al, 2004 [ |
| 4 | M/62 | 1R2G1F1R2G2F (trisomy 9) | unknown | der(9) | 2-step mechanism | imatinib | CCgR | Fugazza G. et al, 2005 [ |
| 5 | M/27 | 1R2G1F (80%)2G2F (20%) | NO | der(9) | Insertion on der(9) | hydroxyureaImatinib | NR | Brahmbhatt M. et al, 2014 [ |
| 6 | M/30 | 1R2G1F | NO | der(9) | Insertion on der(9) | hydroxyureaImatinib | NR | Brahmbhatt M. et al, 2014 [ |
| 7 | F/47 | 1R2G1F | NO | der(9) | Insertion on der(9) | hydroxyurea + α-IFNImatinibSCT | unknown | Batista A.S. et al, 2005 [ |
| 8 | F/31 | 1R1G1F | YES | der(22) | Insertion on der(22) | hydroxyureaSCTImatinib | unknown | Batista A.S. et al, 2005 [ |
| 9 | M/27 | 1R2G1F1R1G2F | YESNO | der(9)der(9)+der(22) | Insertion on der(9)2-step mechanism | Imatinib | MCgR | Bennour A. et al, 2011 [ |
Abbreviations: R=red signal; G=green signal; F=fusion signal; der(9)= derivative of chromosome 9; der(22)= derivative of chromosome 22; SCT= stem cell transplantation; NR= no response; CCgR= Complete Cytogenetic Response; MCgR= Major Cytogenetic Response.
FISH and molecular features of the Ph-neg patients
| Patients | FISH signal patterna | Location of BCR/ABL fusion gene | Molecular transcript | Mutational status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1R1G1F | chr. 9 | b3a2 | unknown |
| 2 | 1R2G1F | chr. 9 | b2a2 | wild-type |
| 3 | 1R2G1F | chr. 9 | b3a2 | unknown |
| 4 | 1R2G1F | chr. 9 | b3a2 | wild-type |
| 5 | 2R1G1F | chr. 22 | b3a2 | wild-type |
| 6 | 1R1G2F | chr. 9 and 22 | b3a2 | wild-type |
aUsing Vysis LSI BCR/ABL dual-color, dual fusion FISH probe system: R=red signal, G=green signal, F=fusion signal
Figure 1DCDF FISH analysis showing: A. 1R2G1F signal pattern and the BCR/ABL fusion gene on der(9); B. 1R1G1F signal pattern and the BCR/ABL fusion gene on der(9) C. 2R1G1F signal pattern and the BCR/ABL fusion gene on der(22); D. 1R1G2F signal pattern and the BCR/ABL fusion genes on der(9) and der(22).
Figure 2DCDF FISH analysis showing 1R1G2F signal pattern and the BCR/ABL fusion genes on both chromosomes 9
Clinical characteristics of the patients
| Patients | Sex | Agea(years) | Sokal risk | Epato-splenomegaly | Count at diagnosis | Treatment | Lastdetail | Follow-up(months) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WBC(109/L) | PLT(109/L) | BlastsBM (%) | Eo/Bso (%) | ||||||||
| 1 | M | 22 | low | No | 52,3 | 398 | 1 | 3 | hydroxyurea, imatinib | CCgR, MR4 | 156 |
| 2 | M | 68 | intermediate | Yes | 93 | 92 | / | / | hydroxyurea, imatinib | diedb | 68 |
| 3 | M | 44 | low | Yes | 32,9 | 250 | / | 0,6 | α-interferon, imatinib | CCgR, CMR, MR5 | 144 |
| 4 | F | 41 | high | Yes | 283 | 560 | / | 3 | hydroxyurea, alloSCT, imatinib, dasatinib, nilotinib | diedc | 105 |
| 5 | M | 47 | low | Yes | 112 | 469 | <5 | 0.75 | imatinib | MMR, MR4.5 | 132 |
| 6 | M | 43 | low | Yes | 176 | 184 | 1 | 1,5 | imatinib, nilotinib | MMR | lost |
aat diagnosis; bintestinal malignancy; cin therapy with nilotinib;
Abbreviations: SCT: stem cell transplantation; CCgR= Complete Cytogenetic Response; MR= Molecular Response; CMR= Complete Molecular Response; MMR= Major Molecular Response.