4.6 Article

High Expression of c-kit mRNA Predicts Unfavorable Outcome in Adult Patients with t (8;21) Acute Myeloid Leukemia

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0124241

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81170518, 81000221, 81370010, 81171820, 81370635]
  2. National Public Health Grand Research Foundation [201202017]
  3. Capital Public Health Project [Z111107067311070]
  4. Beijing Natural Science Foundation [7122169, 7112126]

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The reason that a certain subgroup of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients with t(8; 21) translocation (generating the AML1/ETO fusion gene) displays a poor survival remains elusive. The proto-oncogene c-kit is expressed in approximately 80% of AML cases. The kinase domain mutation of the c-kit gene, one of the most common gain-of-function mutations associated with t(8; 21) AML, predicts higher relapse risk and poor prognosis. However, the role of c-kit high expression in t(8; 21) AML remains poorly understood. Here we evaluated the prognostic significance of c-kit expression levels in AML patients. The mRNA expression of c-kit was determined by real-time quantitative reverse transcription PCR in 132 adult AML patients. Patients were grouped into quartiles according to c-kit expression levels (Q1-Q4, each quartile containing 25% of patients) and divided into c-kit high (Q4; n = 33) and c-kit low (Q1-Q3; n = 99). High c-kit expression was associated with AML1/ETO-positive and with c-kit mutation. Of note, 35.8% of the AML1/ETO-positive AML patients carrying wild-type c-kit expressed high levels of c-kit, suggesting that other factors are involved in c-kit overexpression. High c-kit expression was associated with inferior overall and event-free survival in AML1/ETO-positive patients and was independently predictive for overall and event-free survival in multivariate analyses in a c-kit mutation-independent manner. Thus, high c-kit expression serves as a reliable molecular marker for poor prognosis, supporting a pathogenetic role of c-kit signaling in AML1/ETO-positive AML. AML1/ETO-positive patients with high c-kit expression might benefit from early treatment modifications and molecular target therapies.

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