4.6 Review

Targeting Kinase-activating Genetic Lesions to Improve Therapy of Pediatric Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

期刊

CURRENT MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
卷 25, 期 24, 页码 2811-2825

出版社

BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.2174/0929867324666170727101932

关键词

ALL; hematologic malignancies; lymphoblastic leukemia; chemotherapy; kinase-activating genetic lesions

资金

  1. project ROCHE PER LA RICERCA 2016
  2. AREA SCIENCE PARK, Trieste
  3. NPRP grant from the Qatar National Research Fund (Qatar Foundation) [4-157-3-052]
  4. AIRC [IG 4667]
  5. University of Verona

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common hematologic malignancy in children, characterized by an abnormal proliferation of immature lymphoid cells. Thanks to risk-adapted combination chemotherapy treatments currently used, survival at 5 years has reached 90%. ALL is a heterogeneous disease from a genetic point of view: patients' lymphoblasts may harbor in fact several chromosomal alterations, some of which have prognostic and therapeutic value. Of particular importance is the translocation t(9; 22)(q34; q11.2) that leads to the formation of the BCR-ABL1 fusion gene, encoding a constitutively active chimeric tyrosine kinase (TK): BCR-ABL1 that is present in similar to 3% of pediatric ALL patients with B-immunophenotype and is associated with a poor outcome. This type of ALL is potentially treatable with specific TK inhibitors, such as imatinib. Recent studies have demonstrated the existence of a subset of BCR-ABL1 like leukemias (similar to 10-15% of Bimmunophenotype ALL), whose blast cells have a gene expression profile similar to that of BCR-ABL1 despite the absence of t(9; 22)(q34; q11.2). The precise pathogenesis of BCR-ABL1 like ALL is still to be defined, but they are mainly characterized by the activation of constitutive signal transduction pathways due to chimeric TKs different from BCR-ABL1. BCR-ABL1 like ALL patients represent a group with unfavorable outcome and are not identified by current risk criteria. In this review, we will discuss the design of targeted therapy for patients with BCR-ABL1 like ALL, which could consider TK inhibitors, and discuss innovative approaches suitable to identify the presence of patient's specific chimeric TK fusion genes, such as targeted locus amplification or proteomic biosensors.

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