4.4 Article

Philadelphia-like acute lymphoblastic leukemia is associated with minimal residual disease persistence and poor outcome. First report of the minimal residual disease-oriented GIMEMA LAL1913

Journal

HAEMATOLOGICA
Volume 106, Issue 6, Pages 1559-1568

Publisher

FERRATA STORTI FOUNDATION
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2020.247973

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Funding

  1. Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro (AIRC) 5x1000, Special Program Metastases, Milan (Italy) [21198]
  2. Finanziamento Medi Progetti Universitari2015
  3. Bandi di Ateneo per la Ricerca (Sapienza University of Rome) [RM11816436B712AF]
  4. PRIN 2017 [2017PPS2X4_002]
  5. Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio di Perugia [2018.0418.021]

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The study revealed significant differences in treatment and outcomes for Ph-like ALL patients, including low remission rates and poorer survival rates, emphasizing the importance of early recognition of this subset of patients.
Early recognition of Philadelphia-like (Ph-like) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cases could impact on the management and outcome of this subset of B-lineage ALL. In order to assess the prognostic value of the Ph-like status in a pediatric-inspired, minimal residual disease (MRD)-driven trial, we screened 88 B-lineage ALL cases negative for major fusion genes (BCR-ABL1, ETV6-RUNX1, TCF3-PBX1 and KTM2Ar) enrolled in the GIMEMA LAL1913 front-line protocol for adult BCR/ABL1-negative ALL. The screening - performed using the BCR/ABL1-like predictor - identified 28 Ph-like cases (31.8%), characterized by CRLF2 overexpression (35.7%), JAK/STAT pathway mutations (33.3%), IKZF1 (63.6%), BTG1 (50%) and EBF1 (27.3%) deletions, and rearrangements targeting tyrosine kinases or CRLF2 (40%). The correlation with outcome highlighted that: i) the complete remission rate was significantly lower in Ph-like compared to non-Phlike cases (74.1% vs. 91.5%, P=0.044); ii) at time point 2, decisional for transplant allocation, 52.9% of Ph-like cases versus 20% of non-Ph-like were MRD-positive (P=0.025); iii) the Ph-like profile was the only parameter associated with a higher risk of being MRD-positive at time point 2 (P=0.014); iv) at 24 months, Ph-like patients had a significantly inferior event-free and disease-free survival compared to non-Ph-like patients (33.5% vs. 66.2%, P=0.005 and 45.5% vs. 72.3%, P=0.062, respectively). This study documents that Ph-like patients have a lower complete remission rate, event-free survival and disease-free survival, as well as a greater MRD persistence also in a pediatric-oriented and MRD-driven adult ALL protocol, thus reinforcing that the early recognition of Ph-like ALL patients at diagnosis is crucial to refine risk-stratification and to optimize therapeutic strategies. Clinicaltrials gov. Identifier: 02067143.

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