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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Wiley ; 2004
    In:  Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences Vol. 1028, No. 1 ( 2004-12), p. 409-422
    In: Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Wiley, Vol. 1028, No. 1 ( 2004-12), p. 409-422
    Abstract: A bstract : Meaningful progress has been made toward clarifying the molecular steps in the pathogenesis of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Chromosome studies have established that translocations/inversions are the most common cytogenetic defects in AML. Cloning of chromosome breakpoints has shown that genes involved in the chromosome abnormalities are transcription factors, functional loss of which alters chromatin configuration and results in the disruption of myeloid differentiation. However, transgenic animal models have demonstrated that AML‐specific translocations/inversions alone are insufficient to cause overt leukemia, which occurs only when point mutations affecting receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) develop. Therefore, development of AML is now considered a two‐step process in which RTK mutations provide a proliferative and a survival advantage to a clonal cell population already marked by impaired differentiation. In addition, more accurate definition of such genetic lesions has led to a more precise insight as to how such lesions interact with cellular signaling pathways that are aberrantly regulated in AML. All these new data have profound clinical and therapeutic implications and will surely translate into the development of molecules that target specific mutations or signal transduction pathways.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0077-8923 , 1749-6632
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Wiley
    Publication Date: 2004
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  • 2
    In: Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics, Elsevier BV, Vol. 162, No. 2 ( 2005-10), p. 146-150
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0165-4608
    RVK:
    Language: English
    Publisher: Elsevier BV
    Publication Date: 2005
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  • 3
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 106, No. 11 ( 2005-11-16), p. 4973-4973
    Abstract: In B-CLL CD5, CD23 antigen-experienced B-cell are the neoplastic population. However, a small proportion of patients may present a monoclonal component (MC) and lymphoplasmacytoid (LP) cells, different from those CD5,CD23 negative of immunocytoma. Fludarabine, a very effective drug in the treatment of B-CLL and indolent lymphomas, may favour opportunistic infections and secondary cancers due to intense and prolonged immunosuppression. Herein we report on a 58-year old woman with night sweats and weakness. Physical examination revealed small peripheral lymphoadenopathies. WBC were 17.2x109/l; the marrow was infiltrated by 52% small mature lymphocytes presenting a monotypic kappa light chain restriction and CD5, CD19, CD20, CD23, CD38, ZAP70 antigens. Cytogenetics revealed a normal karyotype, whereas FISH detected 13q- in 48% nuclei. A diagnosis of B-CLL in Rai stage IA without any MC was made. The patient did not receive any treatment and nine months later developed multiple adenopathies and a progressive splenomegaly. WBC were 32.9x109/l; the marrow was infiltrated by 78% mature B lymphocytes and 5% LP cells sharing the original phenotype. Therefore a progression in Rai stage III had occurred and the patient started treatment with oral fludarabine (40mg/m2/day for 5 days, repeated every 4 weeks) which was well tolerated. A clinical response was achieved after fourth courses, with disappearance of adenopathies and splenomegaly, and normalization of peripheral blood. Few days later the patient complained of itching. Her blood tests revealed eosinophilia (42%), but twenty days later an IgG kappa MC (4,3g/dl) became apparent. Ten days later the patient was admitted to our ward because of liver, spleen and lymphonode enlargement and a doubled MC (10.9g/dl). The bone marrow was infiltrated by 60% mature B lymphocytes with the original phenotype and 20% plasma cells with cytoplasmic IgM and IgG, a monotypic restriction for kappa light chains, CD38, CD138, CD56 antigens. FISH showed that both cell populations presented a 13q- and the analysis of the CDRIII region detected only one clonal cell population with mutated Ig(V) genes. In addition a lymphonode biopsy showed a parafollicular and nodular pattern of infiltration by CD20+, CD79a+, CD5+, CD23 +/−, CD10- and Bcl1- B-cells, showing a trend towards differentiation in secreting elements, and by 18% prolymphocytes and paraimmunoblasts grouped in nodular aggregates. In conclusion, the lymphonode histology addressed to an immunocytoma in initial evolution in Richter’s syndrome. Our patient emphasizes the overlapping features between B-CLL and lymphoplasmacytoid lymphoma (LPL) since imunophenotypic, FISH, CDIII analysis demonstrated that the initial clonal cell population was able to undergo in vivo isotype switching to IgG, giving rise to LP elements and plasma cells producing high IgG levels. In addition, the correctness of the initial diagnosis is confirmed by the absence of t(9;14), a rearrangement typical of LPL, and the presence of 13q-, which prognostic impact in B-CLL with LP differentiation may be different than in typical B-CLL. The influence of fludarabine on the differentiation process remains unclear.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
    RVK:
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2005
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  • 4
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 114, No. 22 ( 2009-11-20), p. 2599-2599
    Abstract: Abstract 2599 Poster Board II-575 In de novo MDS the chromosomal pattern is a mandatory step for an accurate diagnosis, predicts overall survival (OS) and the risk of MDS/AML evolution, guides therapeutic decisions. However, conventional cytogenetics (CC) studies show a normal un-informative chromosomal pattern in about half of MDS patients, especially in low-risk disease. FISH with probes pinpointing the chromosomal regions most frequently affected in MDS can increase the incidence of abnormal karyotypes up to 60%, but the percentage of normal karyotypes remains high and makes the search of novel cytogenetic/molecular markers a urgent need. A fundamental contribution to overcome CC and FISH shortcomings, has been recently provided by array CGH (aCGH) studies which have revealed that, independently of the cytogenetic pattern, MDS patients may harbour novel abnormalities involving unsuspected chromosomal regions. Based on this assumption, we decided to investigate whether FISH with probes already employed in aCGH studies can truly unmask cryptic lesions in chromosomally normal MDS patients, whether these defects are either chromosomal gains/losses or balanced rearrangements and whether these chromosomal abnormalities influence OS and disease evolution. FISH analyses were carried out in thirty-five patients examined between January 2005 and June 2008. There were thirteen females and twenty-two males, whose median age was 66 years (range 24–78). According to WHO classification, 6 patients were classified as RA, 13 as RAEB-1 and 16 as RAEB-2. According to IPSS score, 7 patients were considered low-risk, 14 intermediate-1 risk and 14 intermediate-2 risk. Median follow-up was nine months (range 1–46). At the time of the analyses no patients has died; 6 have progressed to RAEB-2 and 3 to AML. Probes for FISH analysis were chosen following two criteria: the frequency of their involvement in chromosomal abnormalities identified by aCGH studies and their Mb position on Human Mar. 2003 assembly according to the UCSC genome browser. All probes, obtained from BACPAC Resources Center at C.H.O.R.I. (Oakland, USA), were labelled and applied as previously reported. The following probes were applied: RP11-912d8 (19q13.2); RP11-196p12 (17q11.2); RP11-269c4 (14q12); RP11-351o1 (10q21.3); RP11-144g6 (10q11.2); RP11-122a11 (7q34); RP11-951k18 (5q13.1); RP11-100m20 (4p14); RP11-544h14 (2q33). The cut-off values for interphase FISH (i-FISH) were obtained from the analysis of 300 nuclei from ten normal samples and were fixed at 10%. An abnormal FISH pattern was revealed in eighteen patients (51.4%). It was observed in 3/6 RA patients, in 7/13 RAEB-1 and in 8/16 RAEB-2 and in 2/7 IPSS low-risk, in 7/14 intermediate-1 risk and in 9/14 intermediate-2 risk MDS patients. Seven presented a 19q13.2 deletion, three a 14q12 deletion, four an amplification of band 4p14, two a defect of band 10q21.3, two a potential amplification and one a deletion of band 10q11.2, two a deletion of band 5q13.1 and one a deletion of band 17q11.2. Cryptic defects were also revealed in six of the nine patients who experienced disease evolution on FISH analyses. This event occurred in 2/3 RA, in 2/7 RAEB-1 and in 2/8 RAEB-2 patients with an abnormal FISH pattern. Despite these data, the prognostic significance of an abnormal FISH pattern needs to be assessed on additional patients. In conclusion, our data show that i) FISH can truly reveal novel lesions involving unsuspected chromosomal regions in 51% of MDS patients with a normal karyotype; ii) most of these lesions consist of chromosomal gains/losses; iii) an abnormal FISH pattern seems to correlate with disease progression, but this correlation needs to be tested on additional patients. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2009
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  • 5
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 118, No. 21 ( 2011-11-18), p. 4867-4867
    Abstract: Abstract 4867 Background: A monosomal karytype (MK) is defined by the presence of at least two or more distinct autosomal monosomies or an autosomal monosomy along with a structural defect. In AML this cytogenetic pattern has a very well-known poor prognostic significance independently of the specific chromosome involved. Currently, in MDS this negative prognostic influence is also emerging as recent data suggest that any monosomy in a complex karyotype (≥3 abnormalities) may have the same poor prognostic impact as monosomy 5 and 7 (−5,−7). Objectives: Thus, the principal goal of the present study was to test whether a MK further worsen the already poor prognostic influence of a complex karyotype and to establish whether autosomal monosomies have the same unfavourable prognostic impact on OS and progression free interval (PFI) as −5/−7. Methods: The eighty-five consecutive MDS patients with a complex karyotype analysed by the present study were included in a series of 631 patients who came at our observation in the period January 2000-December 2010. They were thirty-two females and fifty-three males with a median age of 65 years (range 25–85). Fifty-five patients were diagnosed as MDS and were subdivided in 3 RARS, 6 RA, 6 RCMD, 2 RCMDS, one MDS-u, 13 RAEB-1 and 24 RAEB-2. The IPSS score was intermediate-1 in 5, intermediate-2 in 23 and high in 27. During the follow-up 31 MDS patients died and 41 experienced disease progression (3 RARS, 5 RA, 4 RCMD, one MDS-u, 9 RAEB-1 and 19 RAEB-2). Thirty patients were diagnosed as AML evolved from MDS. Fifteen of them received supportive treatment only, the remaining single agent chemotherapy to control leukocytosis. Nineteen of these thirty patients died of disease related complications. Results: On conventional cytogenetics 37 patients (4 RA, 5 RCMD, one MDS-u, 8 RAEB-1, 12 RAEB-2 and 7 AML) presented a complex karyotype without monosomies and 48 (3 RARS, 2 RA, 2 RCMDS, one RCMD, 5 RAEB-1, 12 RAEB-2, 24 AML) a complex karyotype with monosomies. These two patients subgroups were comparable in terms of age, sex distribution, haemoglobin level, leukocyte or platelet counts, bone marrow blast cell percentage and IPSS score. However, median survival was 8 months (range 1–131) for patients with a complex karyotype without monosomies and 5 months (range 1–81) for those with a complex karyotype with monosomies (p=0.001). Twenty patients (54.0%) without monosomies died after a median time of 6 months (range 2–35), whereas 30 patients (62.5%) with monosomies died after a median time of 5 months (range 1–24). Disease progression was observed in 22 (59.4%) and 19 (39.5%) patients respectively (p=0.001). The 48 patients with a MK were further subdivided in those with −5/−7 versus those with other autosomal monosomies. The 23 patients with −5/−7 presented a median survival of 4 months (range 1–15) and the 25 with other monosomies presented a median survival of 5 months (range 1–81) (p=Not Significant). Fourteen −5/−7 patients died after a median time of 4 months (range 1–15) and 13 patients with autosomal monosomies died after a median time of 6 months (range 1–24). Disease progression occurred in 12 (52.1%) and 7 (28%) respectively. Conclusions: i) a MK further refines the prognostic stratification of MDS with a complex karyotype as it identifies a subgroup of patients with an extremely poor clinical outcome; ii) autosomal monosomies have an impact on disease outcome as detrimental as −5/−7. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2011
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  • 6
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 106, No. 11 ( 2005-11-16), p. 3287-3287
    Abstract: In B-ALL karyotype, age, leucocyte count, immunophenotype, mediastinal mass and leukemic cells in the central nervous system (CNS) are the most important prognostic parameter. The assessment of the chromosome pattern is mandatory for planning a risk-adjusted protocol-based therapy. However, even if the quality level of conventional cytogenetic (CC) analyses has progressively improved, there is a still significant failure rate in identifying karyotype defects in B-ALL. So, due to its considerable developments FISH on interphase cells has been used in addition to CC and has become the method of choice for the detection of high-risk chromosomal changes in B-ALL. In the present study iFISH was performed in 31 adult B-ALL patients (18 females and 13 males; median age 38 years, range 16–76) who presented normal G- and Q-banded karyotypes on CC. They were part of a large series of 251 consecutive adult B-ALL patients who came to our observation in a ten years period (1994–2005). In this series CC presented a failure rate of 19.9% and detected a normal karyotype in a total of 66 patients (32%), 31 of whom had cells in fixative still available for the present iFISH study. This last, which was aimed at detecting the true incidence of the BCR-ABL, ETV6-AML1, MLL rearrangements and p16/INK4A deletion, was carried out with the following commercial probes: LSI BCR/ABL1 dual color single fusion, LSI TEL/AML1 ES, LSI MLL and LSI p16 (9p21)/CEP 9 dual color (Vysis, Downers Grove, IL, USA). Hybridization procedures were carried out according to manufacturers’ guidelines. Cut-off values were determined after having analysed two-hundred cells from ten normal controls and using a one-sided binomial distribution with a 95% confidence interval. So, the cut-off values were fixed at 10% and 6% for the BCR/ABL1 and MLL probes and at 3% for both the ETV6-AML1 and the LSI p16 (9p21)/CEP 9 probes. Overall iFISH detected chromosome defects in 13/31 (41.9%) patients. The most common abnormality, which incidence was 25.8%, consisted in the loss of either one or two red signals corresponding to the LSI p16 (9p21)/CEP 9 dual color probe, caused by a cryptic del(9)(p21) deletion. Six patients presented a monosomy and 2 a nullisomy of the p16/INK4A locus. The ETV6-AML1 rearrangement was detected in no patient. In contrast, the amplification of the AML1 gene and the loss of one ETV6 gene were seen in 2 patients each. Both these defects were present in a small percentage of cells (ranging from 11% to 15%) which had escaped CC identification. A monosomy and an amplification of the MLL gene were observed in one patient each, one of whom with an already documented AML1 amplification. A cryptic BCR-ABL rearrangement was discovered in no patient. In conclusion our data suggest that i) in B-ALL iFISH plays a pivotal role in the accurate definition of karyotype since it readily discovered genetic aberrations in about 40% of our adult patients with an apparently normal karyotype, ii) the loss of either one or two p16/INK4a genes, frequently seen in T-ALL, seems to be one of the commonest defect also in adult B-ALL, iii) the ETV6-AML1 and MLL rearrangements are extremely rare in adult B-ALL, iii) since iFISH did not detect the BCR-ABL translocation in any of our chromosomally normal patients, CC seems to be effective in identifying Ph1+ B-ALLs.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
    RVK:
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2005
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  • 7
    In: Annals of Hematology, Springer Science and Business Media LLC, Vol. 89, No. 6 ( 2010-6), p. 545-551
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0939-5555 , 1432-0584
    Language: English
    Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
    Publication Date: 2010
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1458429-3
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  • 8
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 104, No. 11 ( 2004-11-16), p. 4408-4408
    Abstract: The present study, carried out in two APL with multiple relapses, was aimed at determining 1) which correlation does exist between FLT3/hTERT expression levels and PML-RARA results; 2) whether high FLT3 and hTERT expression levels might be predictive of relapse; 3) whether FLT3 expression is better than FLT3 Internal Tandem Duplication (ITD) for evaluating disease outcome. Relative quantifications of FLT3/hTERT transcripts were performed by real-time PCR using SybrGreen I. For FLT3 calibration total RNA from a normal subject was used, for hTERT total RNA from K562 cells. In both cases the ΔΔCt method was used for quantification. On clinical diagnosis one patient with a WBC of 124.0x109/L and a PML-RARA fusion at PML BCR1 presented the FLT3/hTERT genes highly expressed. On qualitative PCR the patient also showed the ITD of FLT3. He was treated with the AIDA protocol and succeeded in achieving a haematological but not molecular remission. During CR FLT3/hTERT expression remained high and the ITD was never detected. Fourteen months later when on first clinical relapse FLT3 expression abruptly increased, the ITD reappeared, hTERT levels were still high. A re-induction chemotherapy induced a second haematological but not molecular remission lasting five months. FLT3 as well as hTERT expression levels became similar to those of the control, and FLT3 ITD disappeared. A progressive increase of FLT3 expression and an abrupt increase of hTERT expression preceded the second relapse which was accompanied by the reappearance of the ITD. After re-induction chemotherapy FLT3/hTERT expression dropped down to values of the control. A third CR was obtained but the patient remained PML/RARA and Flt3 ITD positive and soon after died of a CNS relapse. The other patient was treated in another Centre and came to our observation in haematological CR. At that time he was PML-RARA negative with high FLT3/hTERT expression. Eight months later he was still in clinical but not molecular CR having a PML-RARA fusion at BCR3, high FLT3/hTERT expression levels and presenting FLT3 ITD. One month later when clinical relapse occurred FLT3 expression levels were unchanged, hTERT expression dropped down to normal values and FLT3 ITD was still present. A re-induction chemotherapy induced a second CR with alternatively positive and negative PML-RARA results, high FLT3 and low hTERT expression levels. The patient underwent an allogeneic bone marrow transplant from an unrelated donor but five months later he relapsed for the second time with an abrupt rise of hTERT expression that preceded a quick increase of FLT3 expression. A third clinical but not molecular CR was achieved after chemotherapy, but the patient remained PML-RARA positive with a normal FLT3/hTERT expression. Two months later a rapid increase of hTERT expression preceded that of FLT3 and the occurrence of the third relapse. In conclusion i) increased FLT3 and hTERT levels during CR are associated with alternative positive/negative PML-RARA results on nested RT PCR and are always predictive of pending relapse; ii) on disease recurrence a marked elevation of hTERT expression often preceded that of FLT3; iii) quantitative real-time PCR of the FLT3 gene was more effective in predicting disease outcome than the ITD, this last being discovered only when FLT3 expression was already high.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2004
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  • 9
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 106, No. 11 ( 2005-11-16), p. 4514-4514
    Abstract: An internal tandem duplication (ITD) or a point mutation of the FLT3 is detected in about one third of MDS patients at the time of clinical progression, but very few studies have determined whether these mutations are already present on clinical diagnosis. A high FLT3 expression is caused by both these as well as by other still undefined mutations. Therefore, we have decided to analyse the expression of the FLT3 gene by RT-PCR on clinical diagnosis and during disease outcome in twenty-six MDS patients. Our study was aimed at determining whether a high FLT3 expression was correlated with any peculiar clinico-haematological parameter, clinical evolution to AML and response to treatment. Fourteen patients were males and twelve females; their median age was 60 years (range 36–76). According to FAB classification seven patients were classified as refractory anemia with ringed sideroblasts (RARS), fourteen as RA and five as refractory anemia with excess of blasts (RAEB). Conventional cytogenetic studies discovered a normal karyotype in twenty patients, a del(20q) in three, a del(5q) in two and a del(12p) in one. Blast cell percentage was 0–5% in twenty patients, 6–10% in four and 11–20% in two. According to IPSS fifteen patients were considered low-risk, eight intermediate-1 risk and three as intermediate-2 risk. FLT3 expression was evaluated through a relative real-time quantification approach which used SybrGreen I as DNA binding fluorescent dye. Total RNA from mononuclear cells from a patient, who harboured an ITD of the FLT3 gene and presented a high expression of the gene, was serially diluted in order to obtain a standard curve for real-time quantification. FLT3 expression was determined by the ΔΔCt method. FLT3 levels were normalized to ABL and calibrated on a normal sample. At the onset of the disease twenty-three patients showed a FLT3 expression similar to that of the normal control, while three (one RA and two RAEB) presented a two-four fold increase. In these last patients no correlation with any particular clinico-haematological feature was noted. Nine of the twenty-six patients progressed in AML after a median time of thirty-one months (range 8–86). Three of them had already presented an increased FLT3 expression on clinical diagnosis. Considering the remaining six patients, a three-seventeen fold increase of FLT3 expression was observed in two patients and a normal FLT3 expression in the other four. Time from MDS to AML evolution was 8,22,29,33,39 months for patients with a high FLT3 expression and 31,40,42 and 86 months for those with a normal FLT3 expression. Three of the five patients with a high FLT3 expression were given different courses of intensive chemotherapy. One of them, who never responded to chemotherapy, maintained a constantly high FLT3 expression, the other two, who achieved complete remission, showed a normalization of FLT3 expression. However both of these two responsive patients again presented a six-eight fold increase of FLT3 expression on relapse. In conclusion, a high FLT3 expression i) may be observed on clinical diagnosis in about 11,5% of MDS patients, ii) does not associate with any peculiar clinico-haematological finding, iii) frequently appears at the time of AML evolution since it was detected in two of our six patients who showed a normal FLT3 expression on clinical diagnosis but a high expression on relapse.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2005
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1468538-3
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 80069-7
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  • 10
    In: Blood, American Society of Hematology, Vol. 128, No. 22 ( 2016-12-02), p. 5493-5493
    Abstract: CMPDs are heterogeneous hematopoietic stem cell disorders caused by the constitutive activation of specific TK genes induced by mutations or, exceptionally, chromosomal translocations that often escape conventional cytogenetics (CC) identification as they often involve poorly stained regions. The demonstration of these TK gene rearrangements is twofold relevant: diagnostically, as these translocations identify specific entities within the 2016 WHO classification of CMPDs and clinically, as most TK can be targeted with specific TK inhibitors. Thus, this study employed FISH probes specific for TK genes to establish the incidence of these chromosomal translocations, to identify uncommon TK translocation partners, to establish whether eosinophils are part of the clonal cell population and to find any potential correlation with clinical parameters and outcome. From January 2005-December 2015 43 consecutive patients (pts) were analysed; 13 females and 31 males with a median age of 47 years (range 22-72). According to WHO classification, 20 pts were diagnosed as atypical chronic myeloid leukemia (aCML), 22 as chronic eosinophilic leukemia (CEL) and one as AML/T lymphoblastic lymphoma (T-LL). Median follow-up was 39 months (range 8-136). At the time of the study one pt died and one experienced disease progression. FISH probes were obtained from Kreatech (Amsterdam, NL), Abbot Molecular Inc. (Chicago, Il, USA) and from BACPAC Resources Center at C.H.O.R.I. (Oakland, USA) after determining their Mb position using UCSC genome browser on Human Feb. 2009 assembly. The commercial probes, applied according to manufacturer's guidelines were: ON FIP1L1-CHIC2-PDGFRA (4q12) Del, Break; ON PDGFRB (5q33) Break; ON FGFR1 (8p12) Break; ON JAK2 (9p24) Break; LSI BCRABL. The BAC probes RP11-484L21 and RP11-880I16 covering the PCM1 gene were labelled and applied as previously described. i-FISH, cut-off values were obtained from the analysis of 300 nuclei from ten normal samples and were fixed at 10%. An abnormal FISH pattern was revealed in 12 pts (27.9%): 5/20 (25%) with aCML, 6/22 (27.2%) with CEL and one with AML/T-LL. Two aCML pts presented a trisomy 8, one a t(9;13)(q34;q14) which involved the ABL gene and a not yet identified partner gene, one at(9;22)(p24;q11) which involved the ABL and BCR genes and one a t(8;22)(p11;q11) which involved the FGFR1 gene. Interestingly, after one month this last pt progressed to AML and on CC showed a duplication of the derivative chromosome 8. Two CEL pts showed a JAK2 rearrangement: one who carried a t(8;9)(p22;p24) on CC displayed the classical PCM1-JAK2 gene fusion, the other who carried a t(3;8)(?;p24) not revealed by CC harboured a fusion between the JAK2 gene and a not yet identified partner. Three additional CEL pts showed a PDGFRB rearrangement which escaped CC detection too. In these pts who on CC showed a t(1;5)(?;q33) with loss of the reciprocal translocation product, a t(5;8)(q33;?) and a t(5;12)(q33;?), the PDGFRB translocation partner has been not yet identified. The last chromosomally normal CEL pt showed a PDGFRA deletion. Thus, in 4 pts FISH with BAC probes is still on-going in order to search the unknown translocation partners of the JAK2 and PDGFRB genes. Noteworthy, despite the fact that all these pts presented a relevant peripheral eosinophilia (≈65%), FISH performed on peripheral blood smears always revealed a normal pattern. The sole AML/T-LL pt who carried a t(8;13)(p11;q12) which produced the classical FGFR1-ZNF198 gene fusion failed to respond to conventional chemotherapy and died of disease related complications. From a clinical point of view 3 aCML/CEL pts with TK rearrangements responded to TK inhibitors experiencing a haematological improvement including one complete remission (CR); the t(8;22) positive pt entered CR after induction chemotherapy. In conclusion, i) FISH effectively reveals cryptic TK translocations in about 36% of chromosomally normal CMPDs; ii) these rearrangements are more common in CELs than in aCML; iii) peripheral blood eosinophils may show a normal FISH pattern; iv) FISH can effectively be used to monitor the clonal cell population during disease outcome. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0006-4971 , 1528-0020
    RVK:
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    Language: English
    Publisher: American Society of Hematology
    Publication Date: 2016
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 1468538-3
    detail.hit.zdb_id: 80069-7
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