"Myeloid" Mutations in ALL Are Not Uncommon: Implications for Etiology and Therapies.
Ilaria IacobucciPublished in: Blood cancer discovery (2024)
In Blood Cancer Discovery, Saygin and colleagues report that somatic variants that are recurrent in myeloid malignancies can also occur with high frequency (16%) in adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) where they correlate with older age, diagnosis following genotoxic therapy for a prior malignancy and worse outcome to chemotherapy. Mutations in these "myeloid" genes can precede ALL diagnosis and arise in hematopoietic stem or progenitor cells that clonally expand and differentiate into both lymphoblasts and nonmalignant myeloid cells, supporting a role for clonal hematopoiesis as premalignant state outside the context of myeloid malignancies and providing implications for both ALL etiology and therapeutic intervention. See related article by Saygin et al., p. 164 (4).
Keyphrases
- high frequency
- dendritic cells
- bone marrow
- acute myeloid leukemia
- acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- randomized controlled trial
- induced apoptosis
- small molecule
- physical activity
- genome wide
- allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
- immune response
- oxidative stress
- squamous cell carcinoma
- high throughput
- radiation therapy
- young adults
- transcription factor
- signaling pathway
- lymph node metastasis
- squamous cell
- community dwelling
- single cell