H. Kobayashi et al., CLINICAL-SIGNIFICANCE OF CHROMOSOME-ABNORMALITIES IN CHILDHOOD ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC-LEUKEMIA IN JAPAN, Leukemia, 8(11), 1994, pp. 1944-1950
Of 240 Japanese children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) treat
ed between 1983 and 1990, 75 (31%) had normal diploidy, 47 (20%) hyper
diploidy with more than 50 chromosomes, 18 (8%) hyperdiploidy with 47-
50 chromosomes, 77 (32%) pseudodiploidy, 22 (9%) hypodiploidy and one
hypotetraploidy in the leukemic cells. Event-free survival(EFS) +/- st
andard error (SE) at 4 years was 74 +/- 7% in patients with hyperdiplo
idy >50, 68 +/- 6% in those with normal diploidy, 55 +/- 13% in those
with hyperdiploidy 47-50, 54 +/- 11% in those with hypodiploidy, and 2
2 +/- 5% in those with pseudodiploidy (log-rank, p < 0.0001). Seventy-
four patients with translocation and 166 patients without translocatio
n had EFS +/- SE of 26 +/- 6% and 64 +/- 4%, respectively, at 4 years
(p < 0.0001). The overall prognosis of our patients was comparable to
that of the patients mainly treated in the late 1970s and reported by
the Sixth International Workshop on Chromosomes in Leukemia, but was m
uch poorer than that of the patients more recently treated and reporte
d from some American institutions. These findings may possibly reflect
less appropriate chemotherapy having been applied to Japanese childre
n with ALL.