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Differential impact of allelic ratio and insertion site in FLT3-1 ID-positive AML with respect to allogeneic transplantation.

Authors :
Schlenk, Richard F.
Kayser, Sabine
Bullinger, Lars
Kobbe, Guido
Casper, Jochen
Ringhoffer, Mark
Held, Gerhard
Brossart, Peter
Lübbert, Michael
Salih, Helmut R.
Kindler, Thomas
Horst, Heinz A.
Wulf, Gerald
Nachbaur, David
Götze, Katharina
Lamparter, Alexander
Paschka, Peter
Gaidzik, Verena I.
Teleanu, Veronica
Späth, Daniela
Source :
Blood. 11/27/2014, Vol. 124 Issue 23, p3441-3449. 9p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The objective was to evaluate the prognostic and predictive impact of allelic ratio and insertion site (IS) of internal tandem duplications (ITDs), as well as concurrent gene mutations, with regard to postremission therapy in 323 patients with FLT3-ITD-positive acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Increasing FLT3-ITD allelic ratio (P = .004) and IS in the tyrosine kinase domain 1 (TKD1, P = .06) were associated with low complete remission (CR) rates. After postremission therapy including intensive chemotherapy (n = 121) or autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT, n = 17), an allelic ratio ;> 0.51 was associated with an unfavorable relapse-free (RFS, P = .0008) and overall survival (OS, P = .004); after allogeneic HSCT (n = 93), outcome was significantly improved in patients with a high allelic ratio (RFS, P = .02; OS, P = .03), whereas no benefit was seen in patients with a low allelic ratio (RFS, P = .38; OS, P = .64). Multivariable analyses revealed a high allelic ratio as a predictive factor for the beneficial effect of allogeneic HSCT; ITD IS in TKD1 remained an unfavorable factor, whereas no prognostic impact of concurrent gene mutations was observed. The clinical trials described herein were previously published or are registered as follows: AMLHD93 and AMLHD98A, previously published; AML SG 07-04, ClinicalTrials.gov identifier #NCT00151242. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00064971
Volume :
124
Issue :
23
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Blood
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
99803789
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2014-05-578070