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Adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia in a resource-constrained setting: outcomes after expansion of genetic evaluation

Authors :
Wellington F. Silva
Mariane T. Amano
Luiza L. Perruso
Maria Gabriella Cordeiro
Renata Kiyomi Kishimoto
Aline de Medeiros Leal
Luciana Nardinelli
Israel Bendit
Elvira DRP Velloso
Eduardo M. Rego
Vanderson Rocha
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Taylor & Francis, 2022.

Abstract

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a challenging disease with a growing genetic landscape, even though there is substantial gap between developed and non-developed countries when it comes to availability of such new technologies. This manuscript reports a 5-year retrospective cohort of newly diagnosed ALL patients and their genetic findings and outcomes. An expanded genetic evaluation by using FISH and RT–PCR was implemented, aiming to identify Ph-like alterations. Patients were treated according to our local protocol, which allocated patients according to age and Philadelphia-chromosome status. A total of 104 patients was included, with median age of 37.5 years. Philadelphia chromosome was detected in 33 cases of B-lineage. Among 45 Ph-negative B-lineage, after excluding KMT2A or TCF3-PBX1 cases, we identified 9 cases with Ph-like fusion. Ph-positive and Ph-like patients had higher initial WBC (p = 0.06). Out of 104 cases, two cases did not start chemotherapy and an early death rate of 10.8% was found. Allogeneic transplantation was performed in 18 cases, being ten performed in first CR. Three-year overall survival (OS) and 3-year event-free survival were 42.8% and 30.8%, respectively. For patients treated with a pediatric regimen, 3-year OS was 52.5%. Extramedullary disease (HR 0.42) and platelet counts (HR 0.9) were independently associated with OS. We still face excessive non-relapse mortality that compromises our results. Alternative strategies implementing FISH and RT–PCR are feasible and able to identify Ph-like fusions. Delays in allogeneic transplantation, as well as the unavailability of new agents, impact long-term survival. Measures to decrease early infection are desirable.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5906ee66de9daf7dcf3a8d6f2cf4db67
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.19440093.v1