Improved prognostic significance of cytokine-induced proliferation in vitro in patients with de novo acute myeloid leukemia of intermediate risk: impact of internal tandem duplications in the Flt3 gene

Citation
Wjc. Rombouts et al., Improved prognostic significance of cytokine-induced proliferation in vitro in patients with de novo acute myeloid leukemia of intermediate risk: impact of internal tandem duplications in the Flt3 gene, LEUKEMIA, 15(7), 2001, pp. 1046-1053
Citations number
29
Categorie Soggetti
Onconogenesis & Cancer Research
Journal title
LEUKEMIA
ISSN journal
08876924 → ACNP
Volume
15
Issue
7
Year of publication
2001
Pages
1046 - 1053
Database
ISI
SICI code
0887-6924(200107)15:7<1046:IPSOCP>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
The heterogeneity of acute myeloid leukemia is reflected in many clinical, biological and genetic features that are used to predict the response to th erapy. On the basis of chromosome aberrations patients can be stratified in groups reflecting either good or poor prognosis. However, the majority of patients fall in an 'intermediate risk' group. Internal tandem duplications in the hematopoietic growth factor receptor Flt3 have been shown to separa te a subset of high risk patients from intermediate or low risk cases. In a n attempt to further characterize the heterogeneity of prognosis among the cytogenetic intermediate risk group of AML, we investigated the overall sur vival, failure-free survival, initial therapy response and relapse rates of 103 patients with de novo AML in relation to autonomous proliferation and the proliferative response to a panel of 10 cytokines in a short-term thymi dine incorporation assay. To exclude perturbation of the responses by other (known) risk factors our final intermediate risk population was comprised of patients with intermediate risk cytogenetics, having an age of 60 years of younger and not showing tandem duplications in the Flt3 gene. Among this intermediate risk group, only the responses to M-CSF and IL-lcr were found to be predictive for therapy outcome. Results obtained by a 7-day culture with these cytokines revealed two subpopulations characterized by a good an d a poor prognosis, respectively. The complete remission rates in these sub populations were similar, but the relapse rates, failure-free survival and overall survival differed. If further study extends and supports our data, it should be considered to include these patients in the poor risk arms of treatment protocols and offer them intensified treatment or bone marrow tra nsplantation.