Deletion of IKZF1 and Prognosis in Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital · Center for Information Technology · +15 more institutions
Abstract
Despite best current therapy, up to 20% of pediatric patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) have a relapse. Recent genomewide analyses have identified a high frequency of DNA copy-number abnormalities in ALL, but the prognostic implications of these abnormalities have not been defined.
We studied a cohort of 221 children with high-risk B-cell-progenitor ALL with the use of single-nucleotide-polymorphism microarrays, transcriptional profiling, and resequencing of samples obtained at diagnosis. Children with known very-high-risk ALL subtypes (i.e., BCR-ABL1-positive ALL, hypodiploid ALL, and ALL in infants) were excluded from this cohort. A copy-number abnormality was identified as a predictor of poor outcome, and it was then tested in an independent validation cohort of 258 patients with B-cell-progenitor ALL.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 104.34
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 37
Authors
28Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Oncology
- Cohort
- Gene expression profiling
- Acute lymphocytic leukemia
- Gene signature
- Internal medicine
- Leukemia
- No poverty