Title of article :
Gene Rearrangements in Bone Marrow Cells of Patients with Acute Myelogenous Leukemia
Author/Authors :
Schmetzer، H.M. نويسنده , , Wiesner، D. نويسنده , , Duell، T. نويسنده , , Gerhartz، H.H. نويسنده , , Mittermueller، J. نويسنده , , BRAUN، S. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages :
-124
From page :
125
To page :
0
Abstract :
At diagnosis, clonal gene rearrangement probes [retinoic acid receptor (RAR)-(alpha), major breakpoint cluster region (M-bcr), immunoglobulin (Ig)-JH, T cell receptor (TcR)-(beta), myeloid lymphoid leukemia (MLL) or cytokine genes (GM-CSF, G-CSF, IL-3)] were detected in bone marrow samples from 71 of 153 patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) (46%): in 41 patients with primary AML (pAML) (58%) and in 30 patients with secondary AML (42%). In all cases with promyelocytic leukemia (AML-M3) RAR-(alpha) gene rearrangements were detected (n = 9). Gene rearrangements in the Ig-JH or the TcR-(beta) or GM-CSF or IL-3 or MLL gene were detected in 12, 10, 16 and 12% of the cases, respectively, whereas only few cases showed gene rearrangements in the M-bcr (6%) or G-CSF gene (3%). Survival of pAML patients with TcR-(beta) gene rearrangements was longer and survival of pAML patients with IL-3 or GM-CSF gene rearrangement was shorter than in patients without those rearrangements. No worse survival outcome was seen in patients with rearrangements in the MLL, Ig-JH or M-bcr gene. In remission of AML (CR), clonal gene rearrangements were detected in 23 of 48 cases (48%) if samples were taken once in CR, in 23 of 26 cases (88%) if samples were taken twice in CR and in 23 of 23 cases (100%) if samples were studied three times in CR. All cases with gene rearrangements at diagnosis showed the same kind of rearrangement at relapse of the disease (n = 12). Our data show that (1) populations with clonal gene rearrangements can be regularly detected at diagnosis, in CR and at relapse of AML. (2) Certain gene rearrangements that are detectable at diagnosis have a prognostic significance for the patientsʹ outcome. Our results point out the significance of gene rearrangement analyses at diagnosis of AML in order to identify ʹpoor riskʹ patients - independently of the karyotype. Moreover, the persistence of clonal cells in the further course of AML can be studied by gene rearrangement analysis.
Journal title :
Acta Haematologica
Serial Year :
2000
Journal title :
Acta Haematologica
Record number :
25431
Link To Document :
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