Case-Control Study Suggests a Favorable Impact of TEL Rearrangement in Patients With B-Lineage Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Treated With Antimetabolite-Based Therapy: A Pediatric Oncology Group Study

Author:

Rubnitz Jeffrey E.1,Shuster Jonathan J.1,Land Vita J.1,Link Michael P.1,Pullen D. Jeanette1,Camitta Bruce M.1,Pui Ching-Hon1,Downing James R.1,Behm Frederick G.1

Affiliation:

1. From St Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN; the University of Tennessee, College of Medicine, Memphis, TN; the Pediatric Oncology Group Statistical Office, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL; the Pediatric Oncology Group Operations Office, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL; Stanford University, Stanford, CA; the University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, MO; and the Midwest Children's Cancer Center, Milwaukee, WI.

Abstract

Abstract TEL gene rearrangement is the most common genetic lesion in pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), occurring in about 25% of B-lineage cases. We previously showed that, among patients treated on St Jude protocols, TEL rearrangement independently conferred an excellent prognosis. To extend these results to patients treated with antimetabolite-based therapy, we performed Southern blot analysis to determine the TEL gene status of 104 cases of B-lineage ALL treated on Pediatric Oncology Group 8602, matched on age, gender, and leukocyte count. There were 52 failures among the 77 patients with germline TEL, compared with only 8 failures among 27 patients in the rearranged group. Based on a two-sided logistic regression analysis, stratified for age (subdivided at 10 years), leukocyte count (subdivided at 50,000), and gender, the estimated odds of failing by 4 years in the germline TEL group is 5.4 times that of the rearranged TEL group, with 95% confidence from 1.9 to 15.6, two-sided P = .0009. Thus, the presence of a rearranged TEL gene is also associated with an improved survival among patients treated with antimetabolite-based therapy. Our results indicate that all newly diagnosed ALL patients should be screened for TEL gene rearrangements and suggest that these patients are candidates for less intensive therapy.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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