| Literature DB >> 35743666 |
Galán-Gómez Víctor1,2, Matamala Nerea2, Ruz-Caracuel Beatriz2, Valle-Simón Paula3, Ochoa-Fernández Bárbara1, Guerra-García Pilar1, Pernas-Sánchez Alicia2, Minguillón Jordi2, González Berta1, Martínez-Romera Isabel1, San Román-Pacheco Sonsoles1, Estival-Monteliú Pablo4, Ibáñez-Navarro Adrián4, Pérez-Martínez Antonio1,4, Escudero-López Adela2.
Abstract
Relapsed and refractory (R/r) disease in paediatric acute leukaemia remains the first reason for treatment failure. Advances in molecular characterisation can ameliorate the identification of genetic biomarkers treatment strategies for this disease, especially in high-risk patients. The purpose of this study was to analyse a cohort of R/r children diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic (ALL) or myeloid (AML) leukaemia in order to offer them a targeted treatment if available. Advanced molecular characterisation of 26 patients diagnosed with R/r disease was performed using NGS, MLPA, and RT-qPCR. The clinical relevance of the identified alterations was discussed in a multidisciplinary molecular tumour board (MTB). A total of 18 (69.2%) patients were diagnosed with B-ALL, 4 (15.4%) with T-ALL, 3 (11.5%) with AML and 1 patient (3.8%) with a mixed-phenotype acute leukaemia (MPL). Most of the patients had relapsed disease (88%) at the time of sample collection. A total of 17 patients (65.4%) were found to be carriers of a druggable molecular alteration, 8 of whom (47%) received targeted therapy, 7 (87.5%) of them in addition to hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Treatment response and disease control were achieved in 4 patients (50%). In conclusion, advanced molecular characterisation and MTB can improve treatment and outcome in paediatric R/r acute leukaemias.Entities:
Keywords: NGS; advanced molecular characterisation; genetics; paediatric acute leukaemia; personalised medicine; refractory; relapsed
Year: 2022 PMID: 35743666 PMCID: PMC9224967 DOI: 10.3390/jpm12060881
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Med ISSN: 2075-4426
Figure 1Work flow from sample collection to MTB recommendation.
Summary of clinical data.
| N (%) | |
|---|---|
| SEX | |
| Male | 17 (65.4%) |
| Female | 9 (34.6%) |
|
| |
| B-ALL | 18 (69.2%) |
| T-ALL | 4 (15.4%) |
| AML | 3 (11.5%) |
| MPL | 1 (3.8%) |
|
| |
| Refractory | 5 (19.2%) |
| Relapse: | 21 (80.8%) |
| Isolated bone marrow | 14 (66.7%) |
| Isolated extramedullary | 3 (14.3%) |
| Combined relapse | 4 (19%) |
|
| |
| Hypodiploid | 0 |
| Hyperdiploid | 1 (3.8%) |
| Complex | 2 (7.7%) |
| Normal | 9 (34.6%) |
|
| |
| Yes | 3 (11.5%) |
| No | 23 (88.5%) |
|
| |
| Standard | 8 (30.8%) |
| Intermediate | 11 (42.3%) |
| High | 7 (26.9%) |
|
| |
| Yes | 13 (50%) |
| No | 13 (50%) |
|
| |
| Alive | 16 (61.5%) |
| Dead | 10 (38.5%) |
B-ALL: B-acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, T-ALL: T-acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, AML: acute myeloid leukaemia, MPL: mixed-phenotype leukaemia, CNS: central nervous system, HSCT: hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
Figure 2Advanced molecular characterisation of the analysed samples.
Patients who received personalised treatment.
| PATIENT | GEN | VARIANT | CLASSIFICATION | DRUG AND | PRIOR/AFTER | RESPONSE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HRL 2 |
| c.183A>C(p.Gln61His) | Tier II | Trametinib (28) | After | NO |
| HRL 4 |
| overexpression | Tier II | Ruxolitinib (342) | Prior | YES |
| HRL 7 |
| c.2503_2506delinsC | Tier II | Sunitinib (383) | Prior | YES |
| HRL 10 |
| overexpression | Tier II | Ruxolitinib (254) | Prior | YES |
| HRL 11 |
| FLT3-ITD | Tier I | Quizartinib (22) | After | N/A * |
| HRL 16 |
| deletion | Tier II | Ribociclib (108) | After | YES |
| HRL 17 |
| c.34G>T(p.Gly12Cys) | Tier II | Trametinib (3) | No HSCT | NO |
| HRL 24 |
| c.319dupC(p.His107fs) | Tier II | Ribociclib (67) | After | NO |
* Under a Clinical trial (NCT03793478).