| Literature DB >> 31447067 |
D Tolomeo1, A L'Abbate2, A Lonoce2, P D'Addabbo2, M F Miccoli2, C Lo Cunsolo3, P Iuzzolino3, O Palumbo4, M Carella4, V Racanelli5, T Mazza6, E Ottaviani7, G Martinelli8, G Macchia2, C T Storlazzi2.
Abstract
Acute myeloid leukemia with myelodysplasia-related changes (AML-MRC) is a heterogeneous hematological disorder defined by morphological, genetic, and clinical features. Patients with AML-MRC often show cytogenetic changes, which are associated with poor prognosis. Straightforward criteria for AML-MRC diagnosis and a more rigorous characterization of the genetic abnormalities accompanying this disease are needed. Here we describe an informative AML-MRC case, showing two separate, but concurrent, chromothripsis events, occurred at the onset of the tumor, and originating an unbalanced t(5;7) translocation and a derivative chromosome 12 with a highly rearranged short arm. Conversely, despite chromothripsis has been often associated with genomic amplification in cancer, in this case a large marker chromosome harboring amplified sequences from chromosomes 19 and 22 arose from a stepwise mechanism. Notably, the patient also showed a TP53 mutated status, known to be associated with an increased susceptibility towards chromothripsis and a poor prognosis. Our results indicate that multiple chromothripsis events may occur early in neoplastic transformation and act in a synergistic way with progressive chromosomal alterations to determine a dramatic impact on disease outcome, as suggested by the gene expression profile analysis.Entities:
Keywords: AML; Chromothripsis; Complex karyotype; TP53; Translocation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31447067 DOI: 10.1016/j.cancergen.2019.06.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Genet