| Literature DB >> 30602617 |
Panagiotis Baliakas1, Sabine Jeromin2, Michalis Iskas3, Anna Puiggros4,5, Karla Plevova6,7, Florence Nguyen-Khac8, Zadie Davis9, Gian Matteo Rigolin10, Andrea Visentin11, Aliki Xochelli12, Julio Delgado13, Fanny Baran-Marszak14, Evangelia Stalika12, Pau Abrisqueta15, Kristina Durechova7, George Papaioannou3, Virginie Eclache14, Maria Dimou16, Theodoros Iliakis16, Rosa Collado17, Michael Doubek6,7, M Jose Calasanz18, Neus Ruiz-Xiville19, Carolina Moreno20, Marie Jarosova6,7, Alexander C Leeksma21,22, Panayiotis Panayiotidis16, Helena Podgornik23, Florence Cymbalista14, Achilles Anagnostopoulos3, Livio Trentin11, Niki Stavroyianni3, Fred Davi8, Paolo Ghia24, Arnon P Kater21,22, Antonio Cuneo10, Sarka Pospisilova6,7, Blanca Espinet4,5, Anastasia Athanasiadou3, David Oscier9, Claudia Haferlach2, Kostas Stamatopoulos1,12.
Abstract
Recent evidence suggests that complex karyotype (CK) defined by the presence of ≥3 chromosomal aberrations (structural and/or numerical) identified by using chromosome-banding analysis (CBA) may be relevant for treatment decision-making in chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). However, many challenges toward the routine clinical application of CBA remain. In a retrospective study of 5290 patients with available CBA data, we explored both clinicobiological associations and the clinical impact of CK in CLL. We found that patients with ≥5 abnormalities, defined as high-CK, exhibit uniformly dismal clinical outcomes, independently of clinical stage, TP53 aberrations (deletion of chromosome 17p and/or TP53 mutations [TP53abs]), and the expression of somatically hypermutated (M-CLL) or unmutated immunoglobulin heavy variable genes. Thus, they contrasted with CK cases with 3 or 4 aberrations (low-CK and intermediate-CK, respectively) who followed aggressive disease courses only in the presence of TP53abs. At the other end of the spectrum, patients with CK and +12,+19 displayed an exceptionally indolent profile. Building upon CK, TP53abs, and immunoglobulin heavy variable gene somatic hypermutation status, we propose a novel hierarchical model in which patients with high-CK exhibit the worst prognosis, whereas those with mutated CLL lacking CK or TP53abs, as well as CK with +12,+19, show the longest overall survival. Thus, CK should not be axiomatically considered unfavorable in CLL, representing a heterogeneous group with variable clinical behavior. High-CK with ≥5 chromosomal aberrations emerges as prognostically adverse, independent of other biomarkers. Prospective clinical validation is warranted before ultimately incorporating high-CK in risk stratification of CLL.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30602617 PMCID: PMC6509568 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2018-09-873083
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113