4.7 Article

A subtype of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia with poor treatment outcome: a genome-wide classification study

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LANCET ONCOLOGY
卷 10, 期 2, 页码 125-134

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/S1470-2045(08)70339-5

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  1. Dutch Cancer Society [FUR 2005-3662, EMCR 2005-3313, EMCR 2007-3718]
  2. Sophia Foundation for Medical Research [SSWO-456]
  3. Paediatric Oncology Foundation Rotterdam
  4. Centre of Medical Systems Biology of the Netherlands Genomics Initiative/Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research
  5. American National Institute of Health
  6. American National Cancer Institute
  7. American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities
  8. NIH [R37 CA36401]
  9. NIH Pharmacogenomics Network [U01 GM61393]
  10. National Cancer Institute [CA 21765]

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Background Genetic subtypes of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) are used to determine risk and treatment in children. 25% of precursor B-ALL cases are genetically unclassified and have intermediate prognosis. We aimed to use a genome-wide study to improve prognostic classification of ALL in children. Methods We constructed a classifier based on gene expression in 190 children with newly diagnosed ALL (German Cooperative ALL [COALL] discovery cohort) by use of double-loop cross-validation and validated this in an independent cohort of 107 newly diagnosed patients (Dutch Childhood Oncology Group [DCOG] independent validation cohort). Hierarchical cluster analysis with classifying gene-probe sets revealed a new ALL subtype, the underlying genetic abnormalities of which were characterised by comparative genomic hybridisation-arrays and molecular cytogenetics. Findings Our classifier predicted ALL subtype with a median accuracy of 90.0% (IQR 88.3-91.7) in the discovery cohort and correctly identified 94 of 107 patients (accuracy 87.9%) in the independent validation cohort. Without our classifier, 44 children in the COALL cohort and 33 children in the DCOG cohort would have been classified as B-other. However, hierarchical clustering showed that many of these genetically unclassified cases clustered with BCR-ABL1- positive cases: 30 (19%) of 154 children with precursor B-ALL in the COALL cohort and 14 (15%) of 92 children with precursor B-ALL in the DCOG cohort had this BCR-ABL1-like disease. In the COALL cohort, these patients had unfavourable outcome (5-year disease-free survival 59.5%, 95% CI 37.1-81.9) compared with patients with other precursor B-ALL (84.4%, 76.8-92.1%; p=0.012), a prognosis similar to that of patients with BCR-ABL1-positive ALL (51.9%, 23.1-80.6%). In the DCOG cohort, the prognosis of BCR-ABL1-like disease (57.1%, 31.2-83.1%) was worse than that of other precursor B-ALL (79.2%, 70.2-88.3% ;p=0.026), and similar to that of BCR-ABL1-positive ALL (32.5%, 2.3-62.7%). 36 (82%) of the patients with BCR-ABL1-like disease had deletions in genes involved in B-cell development, including IKZF1, TCF3, EBF1, PAX5, and VPREB1; only nine (36%) of 25 patients with B-other ALL had deletions in these genes (p=0.0002). Compared with other precursor B-ALL cells, BCR-ABL1-like cells were 73 times more resistant to L-asparaginase (p=0.001) and 1 - 6 times more resistant to daunorubicin (p=0.017), but toxicity of prednisolone and vincristine did not differ. Interpretation New treatment strategies are needed to improve outcome for this newly identified high-risk subtype of ALL.

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