Blood Advances (Oct 2019)

Transcriptome analysis offers a comprehensive illustration of the genetic background of pediatric acute myeloid leukemia

  • Norio Shiba,
  • Kenichi Yoshida,
  • Yusuke Hara,
  • Genki Yamato,
  • Yuichi Shiraishi,
  • Hidemasa Matsuo,
  • Yusuke Okuno,
  • Kenichi Chiba,
  • Hiroko Tanaka,
  • Taeko Kaburagi,
  • Masanobu Takeuchi,
  • Kentaro Ohki,
  • Masashi Sanada,
  • Jun Okubo,
  • Daisuke Tomizawa,
  • Tomohiko Taki,
  • Akira Shimada,
  • Manabu Sotomatsu,
  • Keizo Horibe,
  • Takashi Taga,
  • Souichi Adachi,
  • Akio Tawa,
  • Satoru Miyano,
  • Seishi Ogawa,
  • Yasuhide Hayashi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 20
pp. 3157 – 3169

Abstract

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Abstract: Recent advances in the genetic understanding of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) have improved clinical outcomes in pediatric patients. However, ∼40% of patients with pediatric AML relapse, resulting in a relatively low overall survival rate of ∼70%. The objective of this study was to reveal the comprehensive genetic background of pediatric AML. We performed transcriptome analysis (RNA sequencing [RNA-seq]) in 139 of the 369 patients with de novo pediatric AML who were enrolled in the Japanese Pediatric Leukemia/Lymphoma Study Group AML-05 trial and investigated correlations between genetic aberrations and clinical information. Using RNA-seq, we identified 54 in-frame gene fusions and 1 RUNX1 out-of-frame fusion in 53 of 139 patients. Moreover, we found at least 258 gene fusions in 369 patients (70%) through reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction and RNA-seq. Five gene rearrangements were newly identified, namely, NPM1-CCDC28A, TRIP12-NPM1, MLLT10-DNAJC1, TBL1XR1-RARB, and RUNX1-FNBP1. In addition, we found rare gene rearrangements, namely, MYB-GATA1, NPM1-MLF1, ETV6-NCOA2, ETV6-MECOM, ETV6-CTNNB1, RUNX1-PRDM16, RUNX1-CBFA2T2, and RUNX1-CBFA2T3. Among the remaining 111 patients, KMT2A-PTD, biallelic CEBPA, and NPM1 gene mutations were found in 11, 23, and 17 patients, respectively. These mutations were completely mutually exclusive with any gene fusions. RNA-seq unmasked the complexity of gene rearrangements and mutations in pediatric AML. We identified potentially disease-causing alterations in nearly all patients with AML, including novel gene fusions. Our results indicated that a subset of patients with pediatric AML represent a distinct entity that may be discriminated from their adult counterparts. Based on these results, risk stratification should be reconsidered.