4.7 Article

Molecular classification improves risk assessment in adult BCR-ABL1-negative B-ALL

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 138, Issue 11, Pages 948-958

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood.2020010144

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Funding

  1. ECOG-ACRIN Cancer Research Group
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Cancer Institute [U10CA180820, U10CA180794, UG1CA189859, UG1CA232760, UG1CA233234, UG1CA233290]
  3. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center Support Grant [NIH P30 CA008748]
  4. NIH National Cancer Institute [R35 CA197695, P30 CA021765, R01 CA198089, P30 CA118100-15, R50 CA211-542-04, UG1 CA233332]
  5. Leukemia Lymphoma Society [SCOR 7013-17]
  6. NIH National Institute of General Medical Sciences [P50 GM115279]
  7. American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities of St Jude Children's Research Hospital
  8. Blood Cancer UK [15036, 15009]
  9. Cancer Research UK [C27995/A21019]

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Genomic analysis in adults with B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia revealed distinct survival outcomes associated with different genetic subtypes, highlighting the potential for future therapeutic benefits based on genomic characteristics.
Genomic classification has improved risk assignment of pediatric, but not adult B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL). The international UKALLXII/ECOG-ACRIN E2993 (#NCT00002514) trial accrued 1229 adolescent/adult patients with BCR-ABL1(-) B-ALL (aged 14 to 65 years). Although 93% of patients achieved remission, 41% relapsed at a median of 13 months (range, 28 days to 12 years). Five-year overall survival (OS) was 42% (95% confidence interval, 39, 44). Transcriptome sequencing, gene expression profiling, cytogenetics, and fusion polymerase chain reaction enabled genomic subtyping of 282 patient samples, of which 264 were eligible for trial, accounting for 64.5% of E2993 patients. Among patients with outcome data, 29.5% with favorable outcomes (5-year OS 65% to 80%) were deemed standard risk (DUX4-rearranged [9.2%], ETV6-RUNX1/-like [2.3%], TCF3-PBX1 [6.9%], PAX5 P80R [4.1%], high-hyperdiploid [6.9%]); 50.2% had high-isk genotypes with 5-year OS of 0% to 27% (Ph-like [21.2%], KMT2A-AFF1 [12%], low-ypodiploid/near-haploid [14.3%], BCL2/MYC-rearranged [2.8%]); 20.3% had intermediate-risk genotypes with 5-year OS of 33% to 45% (PAX5alt [12.4%], ZNF384/-like [5.1%], MEF2D-rearranged [2.8%]). IKZF1 alterations occurred in 86% of Ph-like, and TP53 mutations in patients who were low-hypodiploid (54%) and BCL2/MYC-rearranged (33%) but were not independently associated with outcome. Of patients considered high risk based on presenting age and white blood cell count, 40% harbored subtype-defining genetic alterations associated with standard- or intermediate-isk outcomes. We identified distinct immunophenotypic features for DUX4-rearranged, PAX5 P80R, ZNF384-R/-like, and Ph-like genotypes. These data in a large adult B-ALL cohort treated with a non-risk-adapted approach on a single trial show the prognostic importance of genomic analyses, which may translate into future therapeutic benefits.

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