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Secondary cytogenetic abnormalities in core-binding factor AML harboring inv(16) vs t(8;21).

Se Young HanKrzysztof MrózekJenna VoutsinasQian WuElizabeth A MorganHanne VestergaardRobert OhgamiPhilip M KluinThomas Kielsgaard KristensenSheeja PullarkatMichael Boe MøllerAna-Iris SchieferLinda B BaughnYoung KimDavid CzuchlewskiJacobien R HilberinkHans-Peter HornyTracy I GeorgeMichelle DolanNam K KuCecilia Arana-YiVinod PullarkatJessica KohlschmidtAmandeep SalhotraLori SomaClara D BloomfieldDong ChenWolfgang R SperrGuido MarcucciChristina ChoCem AkinJason GotlibSigurd Broesby-OlsenMelissa LarsonMichael A LindenH Joachim DeegGregor HoermannMiguel-Ángel PeralesJason L HornickMark R LitzowRyotaro NakamuraDaniel J WeisdorfGautam BorthakurGerwin HulsPeter ValentCelalettin UstunCecilia C S Yeung
Published in: Blood advances (2021)
Patients with core-binding factor (CBF) acute myeloid leukemia (AML), caused by either t(8;21)(q22;q22) or inv(16)(p13q22)/t(16;16)(p13;q22), have higher complete remission rates and longer survival than patients with other subtypes of AML. However, ∼40% of patients relapse, and the literature suggests that patients with inv(16) fare differently from those with t(8;21). We retrospectively analyzed 537 patients with CBF-AML, focusing on additional cytogenetic aberrations to examine their impact on clinical outcomes. Trisomies of chromosomes 8, 21, or 22 were significantly more common in patients with inv(16)/t(16;16): 16% vs 7%, 6% vs 0%, and 17% vs 0%, respectively. In contrast, del(9q) and loss of a sex chromosome were more frequent in patients with t(8;21): 15% vs 0.4% for del(9q), 37% vs 0% for loss of X in females, and 44% vs 5% for loss of Y in males. Hyperdiploidy was more frequent in patients with inv(16) (25% vs 9%, whereas hypodiploidy was more frequent in patients with t(8;21) (37% vs 3%. In multivariable analyses (adjusted for age, white blood counts at diagnosis, and KIT mutation status), trisomy 8 was associated with improved overall survival (OS) in inv(16), whereas the presence of other chromosomal abnormalities (not trisomy 8) was associated with decreased OS. In patients with t(8;21), hypodiploidy was associated with improved disease-free survival; hyperdiploidy and del(9q) were associated with improved OS. KIT mutation (either positive or not tested, compared with negative) conferred poor prognoses in univariate analysis only in patients with t(8;21).
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