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