Blood Cancer Journal (Jan 2022)

Clinico-biological features of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia with fusion proteins

  • Thomas Steimlé,
  • Marie-Emilie Dourthe,
  • Marion Alcantara,
  • Aurore Touzart,
  • Mathieu Simonin,
  • Johanna Mondesir,
  • Ludovic Lhermitte,
  • Jonathan Bond,
  • Carlos Graux,
  • Nathalie Grardel,
  • Jean-Michel Cayuela,
  • Isabelle Arnoux,
  • Virginie Gandemer,
  • Marie Balsat,
  • Norbert Vey,
  • Elizabeth Macintyre,
  • Norbert Ifrah,
  • Hervé Dombret,
  • Arnaud Petit,
  • André Baruchel,
  • Philippe Ruminy,
  • Nicolas Boissel,
  • Vahid Asnafi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41408-022-00613-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemias (T-ALL) represent 15% of pediatric and 25% of adult ALL. Since they have a particularly poor outcome in relapsed/refractory cases, identifying prognosis factors at diagnosis is crucial to adapting treatment for high-risk patients. Unlike acute myeloid leukemia and BCP ALL, chromosomal rearrangements leading to chimeric fusion-proteins with strong prognosis impact are sparsely reported in T-ALL. To address this issue an RT-MPLA assay was applied to a consecutive series of 522 adult and pediatric T-ALLs and identified a fusion transcript in 20% of cases. PICALM-MLLT10 (4%, n = 23), NUP214-ABL1 (3%, n = 19) and SET-NUP214 (3%, n = 18) were the most frequent. The clinico-biological characteristics linked to fusion transcripts in a subset of 235 patients (138 adults in the GRAALL2003/05 trials and 97 children from the FRALLE2000 trial) were analyzed to identify their prognosis impact. Patients with HOXA trans-deregulated T-ALLs with MLLT10, KMT2A and SET fusion transcripts (17%, 39/235) had a worse prognosis with a 5-year EFS of 35.7% vs 63.7% (HR = 1.63; p = 0.04) and a trend for a higher cumulative incidence of relapse (5-year CIR = 45.7% vs 25.2%, HR = 1.6; p = 0.11). Fusion transcripts status in T-ALL can be robustly identified by RT-MLPA, facilitating risk adapted treatment strategies for high-risk patients.