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Pediatric therapy-related hematologic neoplasms show enrichment for KMT2A rearrangement and lymphoblastic phenotype.

Alexandra Elizabeth KovachDaria KomovaAlbert ItovMaria GaskovaIrina KalininaKirill VoroninYulia RumiantsevaAlexander KarachunskiiMichael MaschanAlexey MaschanGalina NovichkovaYulia OlshanskayaDeepa BhojwaniGordana RacaElena Zerkalenkova
Published in: Leukemia & lymphoma (2024)
In children, therapy-related hematologic neoplasms (t-HN) are uncommon. Many are driven by genetic events independent of clonal hematopoiesis. We sought to understand the clinical and genetic factors of pediatric t-HN in a large independent cohort. Fifty-six t-HN were retrospectively identified. Chromosome microarray, next-generation and/or RNA sequencing were performed. Patients had primary hematologic, solid, or central nervous system tumors. t-HN included myeloid (t-MN) and lymphoblastic (t-ALL) phenotypes. Approximately half of the cases harbored KMTA2A rearrangement ( KMT2A r). Among t-HN without KMT2A r, genetic drivers were heterogeneous, including diverse fusions or aneuploidy. Approximately 18% harbored 17p deletions and/or TP53 mutations. EFS/OS was not associated with t-HN lineage or KMT2A r, but HSCT was associated with improved EFS and OS. We detail one of the largest cohorts to date of pediatric t-HN, confirming frequent KMT2A r and t-ALL.
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