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Hairy cell leukemias with unmutated IGHV genes define the minor subset refractory to single-agent cladribine and with more aggressive behavior.

Authors :
Forconi F
Sozzi E
Cencini E
Zaja F
Intermesoli T
Stelitano C
Rigacci L
Gherlinzoni F
Cantaffa R
Baraldi A
Gallamini A
Zaccaria A
Pulsoni A
Gobbi M
Tassi M
Raspadori D
Leoncini L
Rinaldi A
Sabattini E
Bertoni F
Pileri SA
Lauria F
Source :
Blood [Blood] 2009 Nov 19; Vol. 114 (21), pp. 4696-702. Date of Electronic Publication: 2009 Aug 10.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Hairy cell leukemia (HCL) is generally responsive to single-agent cladribine, and only a minority of patients are refractory and with poor prognosis. HCLs generally express mutated (M) and, in a minority, unmutated (UM) IGHV. In a multicenter clinical trial in newly diagnosed HCL, we prospectively investigated clinical and molecular parameters predicting response and event-free survival after single-agent cladribine. Of 58 HCLs, 6 expressed UM-IGHV (UM-HCL) and 52 M-IGHV (M-HCL). Beneficial responses were obtained in 53 of 58 patients (91%), whereas treatment failures were observed in 5 of 58 patients (9%). Failures were associated significantly with UM-IGHV (5 of 5 failures vs 1 of 53 beneficial responses had UM-IGHV, P < .001), leukocytosis (3 of 5 vs 3 of 53, P = .006), and bulky spleen (4 of 5 vs 4 of 53, P < .001). The UM-HCL not benefiting from cladribine characteristically had bulky spleen (4 of 5, 80%), leukocytosis (3 of 5, 60%), and TP53 defects (2 of 5, 40%), and progressed rapidly after first treatment (median event-free survival, 7.5 months). Our data suggest that UM-HCLs identify the minor subgroup failing cladribine treatment and with more aggressive disease. High incidence of TP53 dysfunction indicates a potential mechanism of resistance to cladribine in the UM-HCL group. Overall, our data provide new molecular elements relevant for treatment concerns in HCL.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1528-0020
Volume :
114
Issue :
21
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Blood
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
19667403
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2009-03-212449