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Missing the mark? Exploratory analysis of the 10-year-old cutoff as an independent marker of high-risk disease in pediatric B-ALL.

Paul E GeorgeNicholas P DeGrooteMichaela HendersonKatherine JordanChristiana Ziworitin-OgolaSharon M CastellinoTamara P Miller
Published in: Pediatric blood & cancer (2023)
This single-center, retrospective study evaluated age as a risk factor for relapsed/refractory disease and/or death in 153 children with B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The study sample included children near the 10-year age cutoff for high-risk disease (6.0-13.9 years at diagnosis) and without other high-risk features (high white cell count, unfavorable cytogenetics). Children 10.0-13.9 years treated per high-risk protocols did not have inferior outcomes compared with children aged 6.0-9.9 years initiating treatment per standard-risk protocols. The study indicates that, in the era of cytogenetics, an age threshold of 10 years might not be an independent prognostic marker. Multicenter analyses are needed.
Keyphrases
  • acute lymphoblastic leukemia
  • young adults
  • stem cells
  • single cell
  • diffuse large b cell lymphoma
  • cell therapy
  • double blind