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Molecular characterization and clinical outcome of B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia with IG-MYC rearrangement.

Authors :
Bomken S
Enshaei A
Schwalbe EC
Mikulasova A
Dai Y
Zaka M
Fung KTM
Bashton M
Lim H
Jones L
Karataraki N
Winterman E
Ashby C
Attarbaschi A
Bertrand Y
Bradtke J
Buldini B
Burke GAA
Cazzaniga G
Gohring G
De Groot-Kruseman HA
Haferlach C
Nigro LL
Parihar M
Plesa A
Seaford E
Sonneveld E
Strehl S
Van der Velden VHJ
Rand V
Hunger SP
Harrison CJ
Bacon CM
Van Delft FW
Loh ML
Moppett J
Vormoor J
Walker BA
Moorman AV
Russell LJ
Source :
Haematologica [Haematologica] 2023 Mar 01; Vol. 108 (3), pp. 717-731. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Mar 01.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Rarely, immunophenotypically immature B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) carries an immunoglobulin- MYC rearrangement (IG-MYC-r). This can result in diagnostic confusion with Burkitt lymphoma/leukemia and use of individualized treatment schedules of unproven efficacy. Here we compare the molecular characteristics of these conditions and investigate historic clinical outcome data. We identified 90 cases registered in a national BCP-ALL clinical trial/registry. When present, diagnostic material underwent cytogenetic, exome, methylome and transcriptome analyses. The outcomes analyzed were 3-year event-free survival and overall survival. IG-MYC-r was identified in diverse cytogenetic backgrounds, co-existing with either established BCP-ALL-specific abnormalities (high hyperdiploidy, n=3; KMT2A-rearrangement, n=6; iAMP21, n=1; BCR-ABL1, n=1); BCL2/BCL6-rearrangements (n=15); or, most commonly, as the only defining feature (n=64). Within this final group, precursor-like V(D)J breakpoints predominated (8/9) and KRAS mutations were common (5/11). DNA methylation identified a cluster of V(D)J-rearranged cases, clearly distinct from Burkitt leukemia/lymphoma. Children with IG-MYC-r within that subgroup had a 3-year event-free survival of 47% and overall survival of 60%, representing a high-risk BCP-ALL. To develop effective management strategies this group of patients must be allowed access to contemporary, minimal residual disease-adapted, prospective clinical trial protocols.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1592-8721
Volume :
108
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Haematologica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35484682
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2021.280557