1. Preferential Genetic Pathways Lead to Relapses in Adult B-Cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia.
- Author
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Navas-Acosta, Josgrey, Hernández-Sánchez, Alberto, González, Teresa, Villaverde Ramiro, Ángela, Santos, Sandra, Miguel, Cristina, Ribera, Jordi, Granada, Isabel, Morgades, Mireia, Sánchez, Ricardo, Such, Esperanza, Barrena, Susana, Ciudad, Juana, Dávila, Julio, de Las Heras, Natalia, García-de Coca, Alfonso, Labrador, Jorge, Queizán, José Antonio, Martín, Sandra, and Orfao, Alberto
- Abstract
Simple Summary: Adult B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) is characterized by genetic heterogeneity and high relapse rate. Forty-four adult B-ALL patients were studied at both diagnosis and relapse by next-generation sequencing (NGS) in order to identify genetic alteration driving relapse. Four main genetic pathways leading to relapse in adults were identified: IKZF1
plus genetic profile, RAS mutations and TP53 alterations in Philadelphia chromosome (Ph)-negative B-ALL and acquisition of ABL1 mutations in Ph-positive patients. In addition, three clonal evolution patterns were identified: the persistent clone trajectory (25%), the expanding clone trajectory (11%) and the therapy-boosted trajectory (48%). Our results reveal the presence of preferential biological pathways leading to relapse in adult B-ALL. Adult B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) is characterized by genetic heterogeneity and a high relapse rate, affecting over 40% of adults. However, the mechanisms leading to relapse in adults are poorly understood. Forty-four adult B-ALL patients were studied at both diagnosis and relapse by next-generation sequencing (NGS). Four main genetic pathways leading to relapse in adults were identified: IKZF1plus genetic profile, RAS mutations and TP53 alterations in Ph-negative B-ALL and acquisition of ABL1 mutations in Ph-positive patients. The most frequently deleted gene at diagnosis was IKZF1 (52%), and 70% of these patients had IKZF1plus profile. Notably, 88% of patients with IKZF1plus at diagnosis retained this genetic profile at relapse. Conversely, the acquisition of RAS mutations or the expansion of subclones (normalized variant allele frequency < 25%) present from diagnosis were observed in 24% of Ph-negative patients at relapse. In addition, 24% of relapses in the Ph-negative cohort could potentially be driven by TP53 alterations. Of these cases, five presented from diagnosis, and four emerged at relapse, mostly as "double-hit" events involving both TP53 deletion and mutation. In Ph-positive B-ALL, the main genetic finding at relapse was the acquisition of ABL1 mutations (86%). Three clonal evolution patterns were identified: the persistent clone trajectory (25%), the expanding clone trajectory (11%) and the therapy-boosted trajectory (48%). Our results reveal the presence of preferential biological pathways leading to relapse in adult B-ALL. These findings underscore the need for personalized therapeutic strategies to improve clinical outcomes in adult patients with B-ALL. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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