| Literature DB >> 31292998 |
Licia Iaccarino1, Tiziana Ottone1,2, Valentina Alfonso1, Laura Cicconi1, Mariadomenica Divona1, Serena Lavorgna1, Serena Travaglini1, Aleandra Ferrantini1, Giulia Falconi1, Constance Baer3, Monica Usai4, Fabio Forghieri5, Adriano Venditti1, Maria Ilaria Del Principe1, William Arcese1, Maria Teresa Voso1, Torsten Haferlach3, Francesco Lo-Coco1.
Abstract
Despite the high probability of cure of patients with acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), mechanisms of relapse are still largely unclear. Mutational profiling at diagnosis and/or relapse may help to identify APL patients needing frequent molecular monitoring and early treatment intervention. Using an NGS approach including a 31 myeloid gene-panel, we tested BM samples of 44 APLs at the time of diagnosis, and of 31 at relapse. Mutations in PML and RARA genes were studied using a customized-NGS-RNA panel. Patients relapsing after ATRA-chemotherapy rarely had additional mutations (P = .009). In patients relapsing after ATRA/ATO, the PML gene was a preferential mutation target. We then evaluated the predictive value of mutations at APL diagnosis. A median of two mutations was detectable in 9/11 patients who later relapsed, vs one mutation in 21/33 patients who remained in CCR (P = .0032). This corresponded to a significantly lower risk of relapse in patients with one or less mutations (HR 0.046; 95% CI 0.011-0.197; P < .0001). NGS-analysis at the time of APL diagnosis may inform treatment decisions, including alternative treatments for cases with an unfavorable mutation profile.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31292998 DOI: 10.1002/ajh.25573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hematol ISSN: 0361-8609 Impact factor: 10.047