Blood Advances (Dec 2019)

Therapy-related acute lymphoblastic leukemia is a distinct entity with adverse genetic features and clinical outcomes

  • Caner Saygin,
  • Ashwin Kishtagari,
  • Ryan D. Cassaday,
  • Natalie Reizine,
  • Ilana Yurkiewicz,
  • Michaela Liedtke,
  • Wendy Stock,
  • Richard A. Larson,
  • Ross L. Levine,
  • Martin S. Tallman,
  • Jae H. Park,
  • Cassandra Kerr,
  • Bartlomiej Przychodzen,
  • Mikkael A. Sekeres,
  • Matt E. Kalaycio,
  • Hetty E. Carraway,
  • Betty K. Hamilton,
  • Ronald Sobecks,
  • Aaron Gerds,
  • Sudipto Mukherjee,
  • Aziz Nazha,
  • Jaroslaw P. Maciejewski,
  • Anjali S. Advani

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 24
pp. 4228 – 4237

Abstract

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Abstract: Patients with therapy-related acute lymphoblastic leukemia (t-ALL) represent a small subset of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) patients who received genotoxic therapy (ie, chemotherapy or radiation) for a prior malignancy. These patients should be distinguished from patients with de novo ALL (dn-ALL) and ALL patients who have a history of prior malignancy but have not received cytotoxic therapies in the past (acute lymphoblastic leukemia with prior malignancy [pm-ALL]). We report a retrospective multi-institutional study of patients with t-ALL (n = 116), dn-ALL (n = 100), and pm-ALL (n = 20) to investigate the impact of prior cytotoxic therapies on clinical outcomes. Compared with patients with pm-ALL, t-ALL patients had a significantly shorter interval between the first malignancy and ALL diagnosis and a higher frequency of poor-risk cytogenetic features, including KMT2A rearrangements and myelodysplastic syndrome-like abnormalities (eg, monosomal karyotype). We observed a variety of mutations among t-ALL patients, with the majority of patients exhibiting mutations that were more common with myeloid malignancies (eg, DNMT3A, RUNX1, ASXL1), whereas others had ALL-type mutations (eg, CDKN2A, IKZF1). Median overall survival was significantly shorter in the t-ALL cohort compared with patients with dn-ALL or pm-ALL. Patients who were eligible for hematopoietic cell transplantation had improved long-term survival. Collectively, our results support t-ALL as a distinct entity based on its biologic and clinical features.