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Data from Integrated Genomic Analysis Identifies UBTF Tandem Duplications as a Recurrent Lesion in Pediatric Acute Myeloid Leukemia

Authors :
Jeffery M. Klco
Xiaotu Ma
Soheil Meshinchi
Jeffrey E. Rubnitz
Jinghui Zhang
M. Madan Babu
Stanley Pounds
Charles G. Mullighan
James R. Downing
Todd A. Alonzo
Yi-Cheng Wang
Hiroto Inaba
Gang Wu
Michael Rusch
Delaram Rahbarinia
Evadnie Rampersaud
Jason R. Myers
Jonathan Miller
Ryan Hiltenbrand
Ilaria Iacobucci
Evan Parganas
Jenny L. Smith
Rhonda E. Ries
Yen-Chun Liu
Marcus B. Valentine
Virginia Valentine
Huiyun Wu
John Easton
Bengsheng Ju
Amanda R. Leonti
Andrew B. Kleist
Jamie L. Maciaszek
Scott G. Foy
Quang Tran
Pandurang Kolekar
Xiaolong Chen
Yanling Liu
Liqing Tian
Guangchun Song
Michael P. Walsh
Melvin E. Thomas
Juan M. Barajas
Sherif Abdelhamed
Tamara Westover
Kohei Hagiwara
Benjamin J. Huang
Jing Ma
Masayuki Umeda
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

The genetics of relapsed pediatric acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has yet to be comprehensively defined. Here, we present the spectrum of genomic alterations in 136 relapsed pediatric AMLs. We identified recurrent exon 13 tandem duplications (TD) in upstream binding transcription factor (UBTF) in 9% of relapsed AML cases. UBTF-TD AMLs commonly have normal karyotype or trisomy 8 with cooccurring WT1 mutations or FLT3-ITD but not other known oncogenic fusions. These UBTF-TD events are stable during disease progression and are present in the founding clone. In addition, we observed that UBTF-TD AMLs account for approximately 4% of all de novo pediatric AMLs, are less common in adults, and are associated with poor outcomes and MRD positivity. Expression of UBTF-TD in primary hematopoietic cells is sufficient to enhance serial clonogenic activity and to drive a similar transcriptional program to UBTF-TD AMLs. Collectively, these clinical, genomic, and functional data establish UBTF-TD as a new recurrent mutation in AML.Significance:We defined the spectrum of mutations in relapsed pediatric AML and identified UBTF-TDs as a new recurrent genetic alteration. These duplications are more common in children and define a group of AMLs with intermediate-risk cytogenetic abnormalities, FLT3-ITD and WT1 alterations, and are associated with poor outcomes.See related commentary by Hasserjian and Nardi, p. 173.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 171.

Details

ISSN :
26433230
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4c6c15e8269161afbfa878da7ad418de