4.3 Article

Tyrosine kinase fusion genes in pediatric BCR-ABL1-like acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages 4618-4628

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.13492

Keywords

BCR-ABL1-like; pediatric B cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia; tyrosine kinase fusion; minimal residual disease

Funding

  1. VICI from Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) [016.126.612]
  2. Foundation Pediatric Oncology Center Rotterdam (SKOCR)
  3. Dutch Cancer Society [EMCR 2007-3718, AMC 2008-4265]
  4. KiKa Foundation [Kika-132]
  5. European Union's Seventh Framework Program FP7 ENCCA [HEALTH-F2-2011-261474]

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Approximately 15% of pediatric B cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) is characterized by gene expression similar to that of BCR-ABL1-positive disease and unfavorable prognosis. This BCR-ABL1-like subtype shows a high frequency of B-cell development gene aberrations and tyrosine kinase-activating lesions. To evaluate the clinical significance of tyrosine kinase gene fusions in children with BCP-ALL, we studied the frequency of recently identified tyrosine kinase fusions, associated genetic features, and prognosis in a representative Dutch/German cohort. We identified 14 tyrosine kinase fusions among 77 BCR-ABL1-like cases (18%) and none among 76 non-BCR-ABL1-like B-other cases. Novel exon fusions were identified for RCSD1-ABL2 and TERF2-JAK2. JAK2 mutation was mutually exclusive with tyrosine kinase fusions and only occurred in cases with high CRLF2 expression. The non/late response rate and levels of minimal residual disease in the fusion-positive BCR-ABL1-like group were higher than in the non-BCR-ABL1-like B-others (p<0.01), and also higher, albeit not statistically significant, compared with the fusion-negative BCR-ABL1-like group. The 8-year cumulative incidence of relapse in the fusion-positive BCR-ABL1-like group (35%) was comparable with that in the fusion-negative BCR-ABL1-like group (35%), and worse than in the non-BCR-ABL1-like B-other group (17%, p=0.07). IKZF1 deletions, predominantly other than the dominant-negative isoform and full deletion, co-occurred with tyrosine kinase fusions. This study shows that tyrosine kinase fusion-positive cases are a high-risk subtype of BCP-ALL, which warrants further studies with specific kinase inhibitors to improve outcome.

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