4.6 Article

NOTCH1 mutations are associated with favourable long-term prognosis in paediatric T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia: a retrospective study of patients treated on BCH-2003 and CCLG-2008 protocol in China

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY
Volume 166, Issue 2, Pages 221-228

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/bjh.12866

Keywords

acute lymphoblastic leukaemia; paediatrics; clinical studies; prognostic factors; T cells

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation Project [81300432]
  2. National Key Technologies Research & Development Programme of the 11th 5-Year Plan [2007BAI04B03]
  3. National Science & Technology Major Project of the 12th 5-Year Plan [2011ZX09302-007-01]
  4. Beijing Health Qualified Personnel Programme [2011-3-049]
  5. Beijing Municipal Education Commission Key Scientific and Technological Project [KZ201210025031]

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Activating mutations of NOTCH1 are a common occurrence in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (T-ALL), but its impact on T-ALL treatment is still controversial. In this study, the incidence, clinical features, and prognosis of 92 Chinese children with T-ALL treated using the Beijing Children's Hospital-2003 and Chinese Childhood Leukaemia Group-2008 protocols were analysed. NOTCH1 mutations were found in 42% of T-ALL patients and were not associated with clinical features, prednisone response, and minimal residual disease (MRD) at day 33 and 78. However, proline, glutamate, serine, threonine (PEST)/transactivation domain (TAD) mutations were associated with younger age (15/16 mutant vs. 48/76 wild-type, P = 0.018) and more central nervous system involvement (4/16 mutant vs. 3/76 wild-type, P = 0.016); while heterodimerization domain (HD) mutations were associated with KMT2A-MLLT1 (MLL-ENL; 4/30 mutant vs. 1/62 wild-type, P = 0.037). Furthermore, prognosis was better in patients with NOTCH1 mutations than in those with wild-type NOTCH1 (5-year event-free survival [EFS] 92.0 +/- 4.5% vs. 64.0 +/- 7.1%; P = 0.003). Longterm outcome was better in patients carrying HD mutations than in patients with wild-type HD (5-year EFS 89.7 +/- 5.6% vs. 69.3 +/- 6.2%; P = 0.034). NOTCH1 mutations and MRD at day 78 were independent prognostic factors. These findings indicate that NOTCH1 mutation predicts a favourable outcome in Chinese paediatric patients with T-ALL on the BCH-2003 and CCLG-2008 protocols, and may be considered a prognostic stratification factor.

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