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Journal article

The genomic landscape of teenage and young adult T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Abstract:
Background Treatment on risk adapted intensive pediatric protocols has improved outcome for teenagers and young adults (TYA) with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). Understanding the biology of disease in this age group and the genetic basis of relapse is a key goal as patients with relapsed/refractory disease have poor outcomes with conventional chemotherapy and novel molecular targets are required. This study examines the question of whether TYA T-ALL has a specific biological-molecular profile distinct from pediatric or adult T-ALL. Methods Genomic characterization was undertaken of a retrospective discovery cohort of 80 patients aged 15–26 years with primary or relapsed T-ALL, using a combination of Genome-Wide Human SNP Array 6.0, targeted gene mutation and promoter methylation analyses. Findings were confirmed by MLPA, real-time quantitative PCR, and FISH. Whole Exome Sequencing was performed in 4 patients with matched presentation and relapse to model clonal evolution. A prevalence analysis was performed on a final data set of 1,792 individual cases to identify genetic lesions with age specific frequency patterns, including 972 pediatric (1–14 years), 439 TYA (15–24 years) and 381 adult (≥25 years) cases. These cases were extracted from 19 publications with comparable genomic data identified through a PubMed search. Results Genomic characterization of this large cohort of TYA T-ALL patients identified recurrent isochromosome 7q i(7q) in our discovery cohort (n = 3). Prevalence analysis did not identify any age specific genetic abnormalities. Genomic analysis of 6 pairs of matched presentation – relapsed T-ALL established that all relapses were clonally related to the initial leukemia. Whole exome sequencing analysis revealed recurrent, targetable, mutations disrupting NOTCH, PI3K/AKT/mTOR, FLT3, NRAS as well as drug metabolism pathways. Conclusions All genetic aberrations in TYA T-ALL occurred with an incidence similar or intermediate to that reported in the pediatric and adult literature, demonstrating that overall TYA T-ALL exhibits a transitional genomic profile. Analysis of matched presentation – relapse supported the hypothesis that relapse is driven by the Darwinian evolution of sub-clones associated with drug resistance (NT5C2 and TP53 mutations) and re-iterative mutation of known key T-ALL drivers, including NOTCH1.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1002/cam4.4024

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
Paediatrics
Role:
Author


Publisher:
Wiley
Journal:
Cancer Medicine More from this journal
Volume:
10
Issue:
14
Pages:
4864-4873
Publication date:
2021-06-02
Acceptance date:
2021-05-11
DOI:
EISSN:
2045-7634
Pmid:
34080325


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
1180383
Local pid:
pubs:1180383
Deposit date:
2021-06-04
ARK identifier:

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