Leukemia Research Reports (Jan 2022)

A rare case of complex variant translocation of t(9;22;16)(q34;q11.2;q24) in a newly diagnosed patient with chronic myeloid leukemia

  • Bradley J. Grant,
  • Zhenya Tang,
  • Gokce A. Toruner,
  • Ali Mahdi,
  • Lindsay Bigham,
  • Jianli Dong,
  • Tejo Musunuru,
  • Jayati Mallick,
  • Kirill A. Lyapichev

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18
p. 100351

Abstract

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Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is a myeloproliferative neoplasm associated with the dysregulated production of myeloid cells. The Philadelphia chromosome (Ph), t(9;22)(q34;q11), is a hallmark of the disease and found in 90–95% of diagnosed CML patients. The balanced, reciprocal translocation places the genes BCR and ABL1, next to each other, resulting in an increase of kinase activity. Additional cases involve complex variants, including translocation events involving an additional chromosome with the creation of the Ph chromosome. A rare three-way Ph chromosome complex variant, t(9;22;16)(q34;q11.2;q24), was identified in a 40-year-old female who presented with visual changes and leukocytosis. Cytogenetic analysis by G-banding revealed the presence of a three-way translocation involving the long arms of chromosomes 9, 22, and 16. Fluorescence in situ hybridization with a dual-color fusion probe confirmed the presence of the BCR::ABL1 fusion.

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