Back to Search Start Over

13q14 Chromosome Deletion Size and Number of Deleted Cells Influence Prognosis In Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia

Authors :
Giuseppe A. Palumbo
Valter Gattei
Robin Foà
Ilaria Del Giudice
Giovanni Del Poeta
Ivo Kwee
Roberto Marasca
Michele Dal Bo
Alessandro Gozzetti
Clara Deambrogi
Giorgia Corradini
Mauro Nanni
Gianluca Gaidano
Francesco Forconi
Erika Tissino
Anna Guarini
Angela Coletta
Francesco Bertoni
Davide Rossi
Rosaria Crupi
Francesco Di Raimondo
Andrea Rinaldi
Luca Laurenti
Francesca Rossi
Gabriele Pozzato
Fabrizio Luciano
Marco Ladetto
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY, 2010.

Abstract

Abstract 3578 Introduction: Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients bearing 13q14 deletion are known to experience a more favorable clinical course. Recent studies, focusing on patients with loss of 13q as the sole cytogenetic aberration at diagnosis (del13q-only cases), showed that the number of malignant cells carrying this genetic lesion correlates with a more aggressive clinical behavior. However, whether the size of the 13q deletion may also influence the clinical outcome remains to be elucidated. Patients and Methods: Probes for chromosome 13q (LSI-RB1, LSI-D13S319), 11q (LSI-ATM), 17p (LSI-p53) and chromosome 12 (CEP12) were utilized on nuclei collected at diagnosis from: i) a multi-institutional CLL cohort (342 del13q-only cases) and ii) a consecutive unselected single-institution cohort of 265 cases. RB1 deleted cases (delRB1) were defined as having at least 5% of deleted nuclei. Time to treatment (TTT) intervals, as well as Rai staging, IGHV mutational status, CD38 and ZAP70 expression, B2-microglobulin levels, all evaluated at diagnosis, were also available for all cases that entered the study. Genome wide DNA profile was performed in a pilot series of 90 CLL samples using Affymetrix GeneChip Human SNP6 arrays. Results: According to genome wide DNA analysis, delRB1 occurred in a proportion of del13q-only cases (36/90; 40%), always comprising the deleted region detected with the LSI-D13S319 probe (that covers the miR-15a/16-1 cluster and the DLEU2 gene) and characterized by a larger chromosome loss (median size 2.07 Mb vs. a median size of 0.86 Mb for the canonical del13S319). Maximally selected log-rank statistics identified the 70% of nuclei bearing del13S319 as the most appropriate cut-off value capable of separating del13q-only cases into two subgroups with different TTT distributions. Consistently, del13q-only cases with at least 70% of nuclei bearing del13S319 showed a significantly shorter TTT than del13q-only cases with less than 70% deleted nuclei (p=0.0001). Del13q-only cases were then divided in four subsets according to the percentage of nuclei bearing del13S319 with or without a concomitant delRB1: del13S319 70% (group 3), 64 cases; del13S319 >70% + delRB1 (group 4), 39 cases. The median TTT of group 1 (not reached) was significantly longer than the median TTT of group 2 (92 months, p=0.012), group 3 (68 months, p70% of cells (with or without delRB1, group C, 25 cases) or a normal karyotype (group D, 75 cases) had shorter median TTT intervals (ranging from 105 to 129 months, p Conclusion: In the context of del13q-only cases, different clinical outcomes were associated to the percentage of 13q14 deleted cells, as well as to the size of the 13q14 deletion, as detected by the LSI-RB1 probe. Moreover, the presence of delRB1 emerged as a feature capable of refining the prognostic assessment in the context of CLL cases with Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3b66c358daf5e79e293c5ca772aa498c