W. Stock et al., LOW INCIDENCE OF TAL1 GENE REARRANGEMENTS IN ADULT ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC-LEUKEMIA - A CANCER AND LEUKEMIA GROUP-B STUDY (8762), Clinical cancer research, 1(4), 1995, pp. 459-463
TAL1 gene rearrangements have been described in approximately 25% of c
hildren with T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Three percent
of these rearrangements are the result of a reciprocal translocation,
t(1;14)(p34;q11). The remainder of these rearrangements are submicrosc
opic and involve a nearly precise 90-kilobase pair deletion of the TAL
1 gene. Detection of these submicroscopic rearrangements can be accomp
lished easily using Southern blot and PCR technology and may have pote
ntial value for monitoring disease during and following treatment. The
incidence of TAL1 gene rearrangements in adults with ALL is unknown.
In this pilot study, we performed Southern blot and PCR analysis in a
group of newly diagnosed adult ALL patients to determine the incidence
of TAL1 rearrangements. Thirty-three adults with T cell ALL were stud
ied; of these, one patient had a t(1;14)(p34;q11) and molecular rearra
ngement of TAL1. No submicroscopic deletions of TAL1 were detected (95
% confidence intervals, 0.000 and 0.106). Unlike pediatric T cell ALL,
the incidence of TAL1 rearrangements in adult ALL appears to be very
low.