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Comparison of Newly Diagnosed and Relapsed Patients with Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia Treated with Arsenic Trioxide: Insight into Mechanisms of Resistance.

Authors :
Chendamarai, Ezhilarasi
Ganesan, Saravanan
Alex, Ansu Abu
Kamath, Vandana
Nair, Sukesh C.
Nellickal, Arun Jose
Janet, Nancy Beryl
Srivastava, Vivi
Lakshmi, Kavitha M.
Viswabandya, Auro
Abraham, Aby
Aiyaz, Mohammed
Mullapudi, Nandita
Mugasimangalam, Raja
Padua, Rose Ann
Chomienne, Christine
Chandy, Mammen
Srivastava, Alok
George, Biju
Balasubramanian, Poonkuzhali
Source :
PLoS ONE. Mar2015, Vol. 10 Issue 3, p1-15. 15p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

There is limited data on the clinical, cellular and molecular changes in relapsed acute promyeloytic leukemia (RAPL) in comparison with newly diagnosed cases (NAPL). We undertook a prospective study to compare NAPL and RAPL patients treated with arsenic trioxide (ATO) based regimens. 98 NAPL and 28 RAPL were enrolled in this study. RAPL patients had a significantly lower WBC count and higher platelet count at diagnosis. IC bleeds was significantly lower in RAPL cases (P=0.022). The ability of malignant promyelocytes to concentrate ATO intracellularly and their in-vitro IC50 to ATO was not significantly different between the two groups. Targeted NGS revealed PML B2 domain mutations in 4 (15.38%) of the RAPL subset and none were associated with secondary resistance to ATO. A microarray GEP revealed 1744 genes were 2 fold and above differentially expressed between the two groups. The most prominent differentially regulated pathways were cell adhesion (n=92), cell survival (n=50), immune regulation (n=74) and stem cell regulation (n=51). Consistent with the GEP data, immunophenotyping revealed significantly increased CD34 expression (P=0.001) in RAPL cases and there was in-vitro evidence of significant microenvironment mediated innate resistance (EM-DR) to ATO. Resistance and relapse following treatment with ATO is probably multi-factorial, mutations in PML B2 domain while seen only in RAPL may not be the major clinically relevant cause of subsequent relapses. In RAPL additional factors such as expansion of the leukemia initiating compartment along with EM-DR may contribute significantly to relapse following treatment with ATO based regimens. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
10
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
101837848
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0121912