Down syndrome childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia has a unique spectrum of sentinel cytogenetic lesions that influences treatment outcome: a report from the Children's Oncology Group

Author:

Maloney Kelly W.1,Carroll William L.2,Carroll Andrew J.3,Devidas Meenakshi4,Borowitz Michael J.5,Martin Paul L.6,Pullen Jeanette7,Whitlock James A.8,Willman Cheryl L.9,Winick Naomi J.10,Camitta Bruce M.11,Hunger Stephen P.1

Affiliation:

1. University of Colorado Denver School of Medicine and the Children's Hospital, Aurora;

2. New York University Cancer Institute, New York City;

3. University of Alabama, Birmingham;

4. Children's Oncology Group Statistics & Data Center, and the Department of Epidemiology & Health Policy Research, University of Florida, Gainesville;

5. Department of Pathology, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD;

6. Department of Pediatrics, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC;

7. University of Mississippi School of Medicine, Jackson;

8. Department of Pediatrics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN;

9. University of New Mexico Cancer Research & Treatment Center, Albuquerque;

10. University of Texas Southwestern School of Medicine, Dallas; and

11. Midwest Children's Cancer Center, Department of Pediatrics, Medical College of Wisconsin, and Children's Hospital of Wisconsin, Milwaukee

Abstract

Abstract Children with Down syndrome (DS) have an increased risk of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and an inferior outcome. We reviewed data from 2811 children with ALL enrolled in Children's Oncology Group P9900, which included prospective testing for the major cytogenetic lesions in childhood ALL: ETV6-RUNX1, TCF3-PBX1, BCR-ABL1, and MLL translocations and trisomies of chromosomes 4 and 10. Eighty (3%) B-precursor ALL patients had DS. Age, sex, white blood cell count, and risk group were similar between DS-ALL and non–DS-ALL but significantly more patients with DS-ALL were white (91.2% vs 76.4%, P = .001). Children with DS-ALL had lower rates of the favorable cytogenetic lesions ETV6-RUNX1 (2.5% vs 24%, P < .001) and trisomies 4 and 10 (7.7% vs 24%, P < .001). Five-year event-free (EFS) and overall survival (OS) were inferior in children with DS-ALL: 69.9% ± 8.6% versus 78.1% ± 1.2% (P = .078), and 85.8% ± 6.5% versus 90.0% ± 0.9% (P = .033). However, when children with MLL translocations, BCR-ABL1, ETV6-RUNX1, and trisomies 4 and 10 were excluded, the EFS and OS were similar for children with and without DS (EFS 68.0 %± 9.3% vs 70.5% ± 1.9%, P = .817; and OS 86.7% ± 6.7% vs 85.4% ± 1.5%; P = .852), both overall and adjusted for race. DS-ALL displays a unique spectrum of biologic subtypes with different frequencies of sentinel cytogenetic lesions having a large influence on outcome.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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