Secondary genetic lesions in acute myeloid leukemia with inv(16) or t(16;16): a study of the German-Austrian AML Study Group (AMLSG)

Autor/innen

  • P. Paschka
  • J. Du
  • R.F. Schlenk
  • V.I. Gaidzik
  • L. Bullinger
  • A. Corbacioglu
  • D. Späth
  • S. Kayser
  • B. Schlegelberger
  • J. Krauter
  • A. Ganser
  • C.H. Köhne
  • G. Held
  • M. von Lilienfeld-Toal
  • H. Kirchen
  • M. Rummel
  • K. Götze
  • H.A. Horst
  • M. Ringhoffer
  • M. Lübbert
  • M. Wattad
  • H.R. Salih
  • A. Kündgen
  • H. Döhner
  • K. Döhner

Journal

  • Blood

Quellenangabe

  • Blood 121 (1): 170-7

Zusammenfassung

  • In this study, we evaluated the impact of secondary genetic lesions in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with inv(16)(p13.1q22) or t(16;16)(p13.1;q22); CBFB-MYH11. We studied 176 patients, all enrolled on prospective treatment trials, for secondary chromosomal aberrations and mutations in N-/KRAS, KIT, FLT3, and JAK2 (V617F) genes. Most frequent chromosomal aberrations were trisomy 22 (18%) and trisomy 8 (16%). Overall, 84% of patients harbored at least 1 gene mutation, with RAS being affected in 53% (45% NRAS; 13% KRAS) of the cases, followed by KIT (37%) and FLT3 (17%; FLT3-TKD [14%], FLT3-ITD [5%]). None of the secondary genetic lesions influenced achievement of complete remission. In multivariable analyses, KIT mutation (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.67; P = .04], log(10)(WBC) (HR = 1.33; P = .02), and trisomy 22 (HR = 0.54; P = .08) were relevant factors for relapse-free survival; for overall survival, FLT3 mutation (HR = 2.56; P = .006), trisomy 22 (HR = 0.45; P = .07), trisomy 8 (HR = 2.26; P = .02), age (difference of 10 years, HR = 1.46; P = .01), and therapy-related AML (HR = 2.13; P = .14) revealed as prognostic factors. The adverse effects of KIT and FLT3 mutations were mainly attributed to exon 8 and tyrosine kinase domain mutations, respectively. Our large study emphasizes the impact of both secondary chromosomal aberrations as well as gene mutations for outcome in AML with inv(16)/t (16;16).


DOI

doi:10.1182/blood-2012-05-431486