| Literature DB >> 33095873 |
Hiroo Ueno1,2,3, Kenichi Yoshida1, Yusuke Shiozawa1,4, Yasuhito Nannya1, Yuka Iijima-Yamashita2, Nobutaka Kiyokawa5, Yuichi Shiraishi6, Kenichi Chiba6, Hiroko Tanaka6, Tomoya Isobe4, Masafumi Seki4, Shunsuke Kimura4,7, Hideki Makishima1, Masahiro M Nakagawa1, Nobuyuki Kakiuchi1, Keisuke Kataoka1,8, Tetsuichi Yoshizato1, Dai Nishijima2, Takao Deguchi9,10, Kentaro Ohki5, Atsushi Sato11, Hiroyuki Takahashi12, Yoshiko Hashii13, Sadao Tokimasa14, Junichi Hara15, Yoshiyuki Kosaka16, Koji Kato17, Takeshi Inukai18, Junko Takita3,4, Toshihiko Imamura19, Satoru Miyano6, Atsushi Manabe20, Keizo Horibe2, Seishi Ogawa1,21,22, Masashi Sanada2.
Abstract
Recent genetic studies using high-throughput sequencing have disclosed genetic alterations in B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). However, their effects on clinical outcomes have not been fully investigated. To address this, we comprehensively examined genetic alterations and their prognostic impact in a large series of pediatric B-ALL cases. We performed targeted capture sequencing in a total of 1003 pediatric patients with B-ALL from 2 Japanese cohorts. Transcriptome sequencing (n = 116) and/or array-based gene expression analysis (n = 120) were also performed in 203 (84%) of 243 patients who were not categorized into any disease subgroup by panel sequencing or routine reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction analysis for major fusions in B-ALL. Our panel sequencing identified novel recurrent mutations in 2 genes (CCND3 and CIC), and both had positive correlations with ETV6-RUNX1 and hypodiploid ALL, respectively. In addition, positive correlations were also newly reported between TCF3-PBX1 ALL with PHF6 mutations. In multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression models for overall survival, TP53 mutation/deletion, hypodiploid, and MEF2D fusions were selected in both cohorts. For TP53 mutations, the negative effect on overall survival was confirmed in an independent external cohort (n = 466). TP53 mutation was frequently found in IGH-DUX4 (5 of 57 [9%]) ALL, with 4 cases having 17p LOH and negatively affecting overall survival therein, whereas TP53 mutation was not associated with poor outcomes among NCI (National Cancer Institute) standard risk (SR) patients. A conventional treatment approach might be enough, and further treatment intensification might not be necessary, for patients with TP53 mutations if they are categorized into NCI SR.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33095873 PMCID: PMC7594377 DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2019001307
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Adv ISSN: 2473-9529