| Literature DB >> 32273762 |
Fatemeh Pourrajab1,2, Mohamad Reza Zare-Khormizi3, Azam Sadat Hashemi4, Seyedhossein Hekmatimoghaddam4,5.
Abstract
The most common acute leukemia in adults is acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The pathophysiology of the disease associates with cytogenetic abnormalities, gene mutations and aberrant gene expressions. At the molecular level, the disease manifests as changes in both epigenetic and genetic signatures. At the clinical level, two aspects of AML should be taken into account. First, the molecular changes occurring in the disease are important prognostic and predictive markers of AML. Second, use of novel therapies targeting these molecular changes. Currently, cytogenetic abnormalities and molecular alterations are the common biomarkers for the prognosis and choice of treatment for AML. Finding a panel of multiple biomarkers is a crucial diagnostic step for patient classification and serves as a prerequisite for individualized treatment strategies. Furthermore, the most important way of identifying relevant targets for new treatment approaches is defining specific patterns or a spectrum of driver gene mutations occurring in AML. Then, an algorithm can be established by the use of several biomarkers, to be used for personalized medicine. This review deals with molecular alterations, risk stratification, and relevant therapeutic decision-making in AML.Entities:
Keywords: AML; acute myeloid leukemia; genetic characterization; risk stratification
Year: 2020 PMID: 32273762 PMCID: PMC7104087 DOI: 10.2147/CMAR.S242479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Manag Res ISSN: 1179-1322 Impact factor: 3.989
Summary of Major Cytogenetic Abnormalities Observed in AML and Related Methods of Detection
| Abnormality | Cytogenetic Biomarkers | Prognosis | Methods for Detection |
|---|---|---|---|
| Favorable | FISH, RT-PCR | ||
| Favorable | FISH, RT-PCR, RQ-PCR | ||
| Unfavorable | FISH, RT-PCR, RQ-PCR | ||
| Favorable | FISH, RT-PCR | ||
| Intermediate or adverse risk in AML | FISH, RT-PCR, Southern blot | ||
| Unfavorable in AML | FISH, RT-PCR, Southern blot | ||
| Unfavorable in AML | FISH, RT-PCR, Southern blot | ||
| Favorable in AML (patients with no additional abnormalities or M5 FAB) | FISH, RT-PCR, Southern blot | ||
| Unfavorable in AML | FISH, RT-PCR, Southern blot | ||
| Unknown | Unfavorable | FISH | |
| Unfavorable | Standard cytogenetic analysis | ||
| Unfavorable |
Note: Data from Prada-Arismendy et al3 and Mrozek et al.8
Abbreviations: AML, acute myeloid leukemia; FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridization; RQ-PCR, real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction; RT-PCR, reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction; APL, Acute promyelocytic leukemia; MDS, myelodysplastic syndrome; FAB, the French-American-British group.
Cytogenetic Abnormalities (Non-Random Chromosomal Rearrangements) Found in the Leukemic Blasts of 55% of Adults with AML
| Chromosomal Abnormalities | Gene Product | Secondary Genetic Alteration | Clinical Relevance | Chemotherapy Recommended |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Balanced chromosomal rearrangements plus gene mutations (ie, balanced translocations, inversions) | ||||
| (a) Core-binding-factor acute myeloid leukemia (10–15% of AML, a good response to treatment) | ||||
| Favorable outcome, cytarabine-anthracycline responders in induction, obtaining CR | Intensive post-remission CC of HDAC [36, 44]. | |||
| ? | ? | |||
| Inferior & relapsing outcomes (eg, young adults), increases the risk of relapse, decreases duration of remission, adverse prognostic factor for OS | Intensive CC + dual TKi (Midostaurin), dual SRC/ABLKi (Dasatinib), post-remission of HDAC | |||
| Favorable outcome, Favorable outcome, cytarabine-anthracycline responders in induction, obtaining CR | Intensive post-remission CC of HDAC [36, 44] | |||
| ? | ? | |||
| Inferior & relapsing outcomes (eg, young adults), increases the risk of relapse adverse, decreased duration of remission, adverse prognostic factor for OS | Intensive CC + dual TKi (Midostaurin), dual SRC/ABLKi (Dasatinib), post-remission of HDAC | |||
| (b) Other molecular alterations in AML with balanced translocations/inversions | ||||
| Poor treatment outcome | ? | |||
| Lower CR, inferior DFS and OS | ? | |||
| Over-expressed | ? | |||
| Monosomy 7, 5q deletions | ? | ? | ||
| ? | ? | |||
| Poor prognosis, treated according to high-risk protocols | ? | |||
| Unfavorable in AML, M4 or M5 subtypes | ? | |||
| Unfavorable in AML, M4 or M5 subtypes | ? | |||
| Unfavorable in AML but favorable in AML patients with no additional abnormalities or M5 FAB | ? | |||
| – | Unfavorable in AML, M4 or M5 subtypes | ? | ||
| Favorable response to treatment (ATRA + arsentrioxid), 100% CR and a 97% 2-year EFS in low-risk APL patients | ATRA + arsentrioxid as a remission induction | |||
Notes: ?Data are not available. Data from references 2, 3, 5, 15, and 10.
Abbreviations: HDAC, high-doses of cytarabine; ATRA, all-trans retinoic acid; EFS, event-free survival; CC, conventional chemotherapy; RFS, relapse-free survival; OS, overall survival; RTK, receptor tyrosine kinase; TF, transcription factor; ITD, internal tandem duplication; TKD, tyrosine kinase domain; JM, juxtamembrane domain; MRD, matched related donor; PTD, partial tandem duplication; CR, complete remission; EFS, event-free survival; HDACi, histone deacetylase inhibitor; MYH11, smooth muscle myosin heavy chain 11; CBF, core-binding-factor; BAALC, brain and acute leukemia cytoplasmic gene; ERG, ETS-related genes; MN1, meningioma.
Other Cytogenetic Abnormalities (Non-Random Chromosomal Rearrangements) Found in the Leukemic Blasts of 55% of Adults with AML
| Chromosomal Abnormalities | Gene Product | Secondary Genetic Alteration | Clinical Relevance | Chemotherapy Recommended |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Molecular alterations in AML with various cytogenetic abnormalities | ? | |||
| Class I mutation | Intermediate risk group/unfavorable outcome | ? | ||
| Class II mutations, mutually exclusive | ? | |||
| Class I mutation | Intermediate risk group | ? | ||
| ? | ? | |||
| Class I mutation | Intermediate risk group/unfavorable outcome | ? | ||
| ? | ? | |||
| Class I mutation | Intermediate risk group | ? | ||
| Oncogene, unfavorable/adverse outcome | ? | |||
| 2. AML with complex karyotype (≥3 acquired chromosomal aberrations) (10-12% of all AML) | ||||
| Deletions of: | Genome instability | Unfavorable; lower CR and OS rates and shorter DFS | ? | |
| Genomic gains to: | Oncogene activation | Unfavorable; lower CR and OS rates and shorter DFS | ? | |
| - | Unfavorable; lower CR and OS rates and shorter DFS | ? | ||
| - | Unfavorable; lower CR and OS rates, higher relapse | ? | ||
| - | Unfavorable; shorter RFS, ATRA resistance in elderly | ? | ||
| Recurrent amplifications: | Oncogene activation | - | ? | ? |
Notes: The intermediate-risk group: any abnormality that is not classified as a favorable or adverse outcome. ?Data are not available. Data from references 2, 3, 5, 15, and 10.
Abbreviations: HDAC, high-doses of cytarabine; ATRA, all-trans retinoic acid; RFS, relapse-free survival; CC, conventional chemotherapy; RFS, relapse-free survival; OS, overall survival; RTK, receptor tyrosine kinase; TF, transcription factor; ITD, internal tandem duplication; TKD, tyrosine kinase domain; JM, juxtamembrane domain; MRD, matched related donor; PTD, partial tandem duplication; CR, complete remission; EFS, event-free survival (EFS); DNMTi, DNA methyltransferase inhibitor; AT, autologous transplantation; UPD, uniparental disomy; CBF, core-binding-factor; BAALC, brain and acute leukemia cytoplasmic gene; ERG, ETS-related genes; MN1, meningioma1.
Prototype of Gene Mutations Occurred in Cytogenetically Normal AML or in Cytogenetically Defined AML Subsets (~40–50% of Adult and 25% of Pediatric AML)
| Gene Mutations (Locations) | Biological and Clinical Features | Recommended Chemotherapy | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The most frequent genetic alteration in adult AML, mutated transcripts as MRD associated with a relapse and a lower rate of survival | Better response to induction & consolidation CC | Favorable outcome: (increased DFR, RFS and OS), achievement of CR | |
| A class III RTK, ITD in JM domain, constitutive activation of MAPK, STAT, and AKT/PI3K pathways, uncontrolled proliferation/survival of leukemic HPCs | CC + double TKi is recommended & promising | Inferior outcome/poor prognosis, especially depends on the high allelic ratio (the | |
| Point mutations in TK domain, constitutive activation of the receptor | CC + double TKi eg midostaurin, crenolanib, gilteritinib | Negative/positive prognostic impact if being with NPM1 mutation | |
| A master TF in hematopoiesis, mutations/its promoter hypermethylation decrease DNA-binding (leucine zipper domain) activity/its expression, mutually exclusive with | – | Double-mutations have a favorable outcome: higher CR duration, better RFS, OS, similar to those of mutant NPM1 | |
| A DNA binding protein regulates hematopoiesis by epigenetics, cooperating with epigenetic factors (DNMTs & HDACs) | CC + HDACi (depsipeptide) + DNMTi (decitabine) reactivate the MLL wild-type allele & induce cell death of the blasts | Unfavorable outcome: shorter CR duration, inferior RFS & EFS, No effect on OS | |
| A TF makes dimers with CBF-β for hematopoietic differentiation | – | Unfavorable outcome | |
| A class III RTK, a key role in proliferation & survival of hematopoietic progenitor cells, gain of function mutations, high frequency in t(8; 21), detected by allele specific PCR | CC + double TKi is recommended & promising | Inferior outcome, in particular in mutations of exon 17 | |
| Membrane-associated G proteins, transforming oncogene, high frequency in the favorable risk inv(16) or inv(3) group, | Sensitive to HDCA (post-remission HDAC) + farnesyl transferase inhibitor (tipifarnib, shuts down RAS) | Poor outcome | |
| Associated with high percentage of blood blasts, immature subtypes M0/M1, monocytic differentiation, accompanied by | Induction failure, modulation of induction + intensification of post-remission + consolidation with allogeneic SCT | An adverse risk factor, unfavorable outcome: (low CR rates, high CIR, inferior OS (3 years)) | |
| A TF is related to proliferation in hematopoietic progenitor cells, concurrent of FLT3-ITD, a marker of MRD, | Induction failure, modulation of induction + intensification of post-remission | Unfavorable; associated with induction failure | |
| Low MN1 expression responds to ATRA, high MN1 expression resistant to ATRA | Poor response to the first induction treatment, ATRA resistance in elderly | Unfavorable outcome: (short RFS) |
Note: Data from references 1–3,8, and 13.
Abbreviations: CC, conventional chemotherapy; MRD, minimal residual disease; RFS, relapse-free survival; OS, overall survival; CR, complete remission; EFS, event-free survival; CIR, cumulative incidence of relapse; DFS, disease-free survival; HPCs, hematopoietic progenitor cells; RTK, receptor tyrosine kinase; TF, transcription factor; FLT3, FMS-related tyrosine kinase 3; FLT3-ITD, internal tandem duplication of FLT3; TKD, tyrosine kinase domain; JM, juxtamembrane domain; MRD, matched related donor; PTD, partial tandem duplication; DNMTi, DNA methyltransferase inhibitor; CEBPA, CCAAT enhancer-binding protein gene; WT1, Wilms tumor gene; HDACi, histone deacetylase inhibitor; AT, transcription factor; CBF, core-binding-factor; BAALC, brain and acute leukemia cytoplasmic gene; MN1, meningioma1; SCT, stem-cell transplantation; MDR, multi-drug resistance, RUNX1, Runt-related transcription factor 1, HDAC, high-doses of cytarabine; HDACi, histone deacetylase inhibitor.
Summary of the Most Common Epigenetic Mutations Occurred in AML
| Mutation Biomarkers | Clinical/Biological Features | Prognosis and Therapy |
|---|---|---|
| The earliest & recurrent alteration in pre-leukemic HSCs, limiting myeloid differentiation and promoting HSC expansion, associated with enzyme loss-of-function & hypomethylation of Runx1, Erg, Myc, Smad3, mutation persists in HSCs after remission, whereby consequently impairing HSC differentiation | Unfavorable outcome and poor prognosis, or favorable response (higher CR & a superior OS) in DNMTi treatments (Dec, Aza) | |
| Rare in hematological malignancies, very common in complex karyotypes, the most important prognostic factor in AML | Poor prognosis: (lower CR, IEF, RFS, RFR, OS) | |
| DNA hypermethylation phenotype, blocking histone demethylation, neomorphic function, adverse clinical outcome & poor prognosis when accompany | Adverse prognostic factor for overall survival, favorable response (higher CR and a superior OS) in DNMTi treatments (Dec, Aza) | |
| DNA hypermethylation phenotype, blocking histone demethylation, | A higher clinical remission rate & favorable response (higher CR and a superior OS) in DNMTi treatments (Dec, Aza) |
Note: Data from references 1–3, and 12.
Abbreviations: HSCs, hematopoietic stem cells; CR, complete remission rates; IEF, inferior event-free, RFR, relapse-free survival; OS, overall survival; CC, conventional chemotherapy; TKi, tyrosine kinase inhibitor; DNMTi, DNA methyltransferase inhibitor; Dec, decitabine; Aza, azacitidine; TS, tumor-suppressor genes; αKGDD, alpha-ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase; 2HG, 2-hydroxyglutarate
Prototype of the Collaboration Between at Least Three Classes of Mutations (Class I, II, III) Associated with Appearance of AML
| Class I Mutations (Confer Proliferation & Survival) | Class II Mutations (Confer Differentiation and Apoptosis) | Class 0/III Mutations (Confer Epigenetic Alteration) |
|---|---|---|
| - |
Note: Data from Chiaretti et al.1
Abbreviations: FLT3, FMS-like tyrosine kinase 3 gene; CEBPA, CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein alpha gene; MLL-AML/PTD, Partial tandem duplication (PTD) of the mixed-lineage leukemia (MLL) gene; BAALC, brain and acute leukemia, cytoplasmic gene; ERG, ETS-related gene; WT1, Wilms tumor gene; MN1, Meningioma 1 gene; DNMT3A, DNA methyltransferase 3A gene; IDH ½, isocitrate dehydrogenase gene; TET, (Ten-Eleven translocation) proteins; αKG-DD, α-Ketoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase; NPM1, nucleophosmin 1gene; NRAS, neuroblastoma RAS viral oncogene homolog gene; RUNX1, the runt-related transcription factor 1 gene.
Figure 1A schematic representation of the collaboration between at least three classes of gene alterations (class I, II, III), that happen in a hematopoietic progenitor cell (HPC) and are associated with the appearance of AML. Class I alterations enhance proliferative signaling pathways and confer survival advantages. Class II alterations impair the processes of cell differentiation and apoptosis. Class 0/III, however, can also be an early event before class I, promotes epigenetic modifications which finally confer malignant transformation to the HPCs and lead to overt leukemia. Data from references 2, 6, 12, 13, 16, and 17.
Figure 2Percentage of the major cytogenetic subgroups of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) (excluding acute promyelocytic leukemia), and associated gene mutations. In the subgroup with various karyotypes, NPM1 mutations are frequently found in AML with 9q deletion and trisomy 8, CEBPA mutations in AML with 9q deletion, MLL mutations in AML with trisomy 11, and RUNX1 mutations in AML with trisomy 13 and trisomy 21 (frequencies of the cytogenetic subgroups are taken from Reference 36, derived from 2654 cytogenetically characterized adults (≥18 years) with de novo or secondary AML entered on AMLSG treatment trials).
Note: Data from Chiaretti et al.1
Figure 3(A) Approximate distribution of gene mutations in cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia (CN-AML) in all patients (class I & II gene mutations).8 Adapted from Zaidi SZ, Owaidah T, Al Sharif F, Ahmed SY, Chaudhri N, Aljurf M. The challenge of risk stratification in acute myeloid leukemia with normal karyotype. Data from Zaidi et al.9 (B): Distribution of class I/II gene mutations among CN-AML patients with NPM1 mutation. In about 28% of cases, NPM1 mutation is the only detectable genetic change, whereas in the majority of cases additional mutations are found in genes such as FLT3, NRAS and WT1 (in approximately 40%, 21%, 17% of NPM1 mutations, respectively). A small number of AML with NPM1 mutations have an additional hypothetical class II mutation, eg, NPM1 and concurrent CEBPA mutation. Data from Dohner and Döhner.2
Figure 4Frequencies of the more common cytogenetic abnormalities in adult and childhood AML. *Percentages for particular abnormalities were calculated using only those studies that provided relevant data where AML children aged from 2 months to 18 years and AML adults aged 18–86 years, diagnosed with de novo AML; data are derived from Mrozek et al8 and according to Cooperative Group Study of SWOG/ECOG, CALGB and MRC.
Abbreviations: CALGB, Cancer and Leukemia Group B; MRC, United Kingdom Medical Research Council; SWOG/ECOG, Southwest Oncology Group/Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group; abn, abnormality.
Risk Stratification of the Most Common Chromosomal Aberrations Detected in AML
| Recurrent Chromosomal Aberrations | Outcomes a | Chemotherapy Responses b | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CR Rate | CIR | OS | ||
| Favorable | Favorable | Favorable | Favorable | |
| Favorable | Favorable | Favorable | Favorable | |
| Favorable | Favorable | Favorable | Favorable | |
| Favorable | NA | NA | NA | |
| Favorable | NA | NA | NA | |
| Adverse | Intermediate | NA | Adverse | |
| Adverse | Intermediate | NA | Adverse | |
| Adverse | Intermediate | NA | Adverse | |
| Adverse | NA | NA | NA | |
| Adverse | Intermediate | Intermediate | Intermediate | |
| Adverse | Intermediate | Intermediate | Intermediate | |
| Intermediate | Intermediate | Intermediate | Intermediate | |
| Intermediate | Intermediate | Intermediate | Adverse | |
| NA | Intermediate | Intermediate | Intermediate | |
| NA | Intermediate | Adverse | Intermediate | |
| Intermediate | NA | NA | NA | |
| NA | NA | NA | NA | |
| Adverse | Intermediate | Adverse | Adverse | |
| Adverse | NA | NA | NA | |
| Adverse | NA | NA | NA | |
| Adverse | Adverse | Adverse | Adverse | |
| Adverse | Adverse | Adverse | Adverse | |
| Adverse | Adverse | Adverse | Adverse | |
| Adverse | NA | NA | NA | |
| Adverse | NA | NA | NA | |
| Adverse | NA | NA | NA | |
| Intermediate | Adverse | Intermediate | Intermediate | |
Notes: aAccording to SWOG/ECOG, Southwest Oncology Group/Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group, a Cooperative Group Study. bAccording to CALGB, Cancer and Leukemia Group B, Cooperative Group Study, three large collaborative studies proposed prioritization schemata that assign AML patients to one of the three risk groups, favorable, intermediate or adverse, based on pretreatment cytogenetic findings. Data from Mrozek et al.15
Abbreviations: CR, complete remission; CIR, cumulative incidence of relapse; OS, 5-year overall survival; abn, abnormality; NA, not available.
Summary of Expression Profile of Prognostic miRNAs in AML
| Prognostic Biomarker | Biological Features | Prognosis |
|---|---|---|
| Down-regulated in normal myelopoiesis, over-expressed in AML | Prognosis biomarker for unfavorable outcomes, expression may be changed during cytarabine therapy, | |
| Down-regulated in AML | Prognosis biomarker for favorable outcomes | |
| Located on chromosomes 19, 21, and 11, highly expressed in HSCs & myeloid transformation | Expression may be changed during cytarabine therapy | |
| Highly expressed in HSCs & myeloid transformation, associated with | Associated with worse overall survival, expression may be changed during cytarabine therapy, | |
| Targeting DNMT3A and DNMT3B, its down-regulation is an important biomarker of response to treatment | Associated with worse overall survival, expression is changed during cytarabine therapy | |
| Highly expressed in | Prognosis biomarker | |
| Highly expressed in | Prognosis biomarker, expression may be changed during cytarabine therapy | |
| Highly expressed in | Prognosis biomarker for unfavorable outcomes in |
Note: Data from Chiaretti et al1 and Prada-Arismendy et al.3Abbreviations: miRNA, MicroRNA; HSCs, hematopoietic stem cells; WT, wild type.