Prevalence, clinical and haematological profile and outcome of BCR-ABL1-like acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in Indian children: A prospective observational study
Sanjeev Khera , Rajan Kapoor , Amit Kumar , Ankur Ahuja , Jasdeep Singh , Preeti Tripathi , Rajiv Kumar
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
BCR-ABL1-like acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) represents a perplexing subclass of ALL mainly due to genomic heterogeneity and non-availability of standardized diagnostic tests. The data on prevalence, clinical–haematological profile and outcome are limited, more so from low-middle income countries.
Methods
This prospective observational study enrolled children<14 years with B-ALL. Recurrent genetic/chromosomal aberrations were excluded. BCR-ABL1-like aberrations were analysed using Polymerized Chain Reaction (PCR) or Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS). Two groups with/without BCR-ABL1-like ALL (Mut+/Mut-) were compared.
Results
Out of 214 eligible children; 75 with “B-other ALL” were analysed for BCR-ABL1-like aberrations. Their prevalence was 34/214 (15.8%) in B-ALL and 34/75 (45.3%) in “B-other” ALL (PCR:33.3% and NGS:53.3%). Majority of the aberrations were JAK2E16 and ILR7e5/ILR7e6 with PCR and RAS pathway and PAX5 fusion with NGS. Baseline demographic, clinical and laboratory parameters including aberrant flowcytometry were comparable in Mut+ and Mut-groups. Children with day-8 absolute blast count (ABC) were higher in Mut+ group. High end-induction minimal residual disease (MRD) was comparable in two groups. Number of NCI-standard risk (SR) at diagnosis with high D-8 ABC or high MRD was higher in Mut+ group. Similar results were found when aberrations were analysed by NGS alone. In all 56 children are alive, 19 had an event (relapse/death). The outcomes were comparable in two groups with median follow-up of 1075 days (IQR: 660–1527); when analysis was based on combined as well as NGS-based methodology alone.
Conclusions
We report 15.8% prevalence of BCR-ABL1-like ALL in children by PCR or NGS. High D-8 ABC was associated with BCR-ABL1-like ALL with no impact on outcomes.
期刊介绍:
This journal was conceived in 1945 as the Journal of Indian Army Medical Corps. Col DR Thapar was the first Editor who published it on behalf of Lt. Gen Gordon Wilson, the then Director of Medical Services in India. Over the years the journal has achieved various milestones. Presently it is published in Vancouver style, printed on offset, and has a distribution exceeding 5000 per issue. It is published in January, April, July and October each year.