Ford A M, Fasching K, Panzer-Grümayer E R, Koenig M, Haas O A, Greaves M F
Leukaemia Research Fund Centre, Institute of Cancer Research, Chester Beatty Laboratories, 237 Fulham Road, London SW3 6JB, United Kingdom.
Blood. 2001 Aug 1;98(3):558-64. doi: 10.1182/blood.v98.3.558.
Approximately 20% of childhood B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) has a TEL-AML1 fusion gene, often in association with deletions of the nonrearranged TEL allele. TEL-AML1 gene fusion appears to be an initiating event and usually occurs before birth, in utero. This subgroup of ALL generally presents with low- or medium-risk features and overall has a very good prognosis. Some patients, however, do have relapses late or after the cessation of treatment, at least on some therapeutic protocols. They usually achieve sustained second remissions. Posttreatment relapses, or even very late relapses (5-20 years after diagnosis), in childhood ALL are clonally related to the leukemic cells at diagnosis (by IGH or T-cell receptor [TCR] gene sequencing) and are considered, therefore, to represent a slow re-emergence or escape of the initial clone seen at diagnosis. Microsatellite markers and fluorescence in situ hybridization identified deletions of the unrearranged TEL allele and IGH/TCR gene rearrangements were analyzed; the results show that posttreatment relapse cells in 2 patients with TEL-AML1-positive ALL were not derived from the dominant clone present at diagnosis but were from a sibling clone. In contrast, a patient who had a relapse while on treatment with TEL-AML1 fusion had essentially the same TEL deletion, though with evidence for microsatellite instability 5(') of TEL gene deletion at diagnosis, leading to extended 5(') deletion at relapse. It is speculated that, in some patients, combination chemotherapy for childhood ALL may fail to eliminate a fetal preleukemic clone with TEL-AML1 and that a second, independent transformation event within this clone after treatment gives rise to a new leukemia masquerading as relapse. (Blood. 2001;98:558-564)
约20%的儿童B前体急性淋巴细胞白血病(ALL)存在TEL-AML1融合基因,常伴有未重排TEL等位基因的缺失。TEL-AML1基因融合似乎是一个起始事件,通常发生在出生前的子宫内。ALL的这一亚组通常表现为低危或中危特征,总体预后非常好。然而,一些患者确实会在治疗后期或治疗停止后复发,至少在某些治疗方案中是这样。他们通常能实现持续的第二次缓解。儿童ALL治疗后的复发,甚至是非常晚期的复发(诊断后5 - 20年),通过IGH或T细胞受体(TCR)基因测序,在克隆上与诊断时的白血病细胞相关,因此被认为代表了诊断时所见初始克隆的缓慢重新出现或逃逸。分析了微卫星标记和荧光原位杂交以确定未重排TEL等位基因的缺失以及IGH/TCR基因重排;结果显示,2例TEL-AML1阳性ALL患者治疗后的复发细胞并非来自诊断时存在的优势克隆,而是来自一个姐妹克隆。相比之下,1例在接受TEL-AML1融合治疗时复发的患者,其TEL缺失基本相同,不过在诊断时TEL基因缺失存在微卫星不稳定性的证据,导致复发时5(')缺失延长。据推测,在一些患者中,儿童ALL的联合化疗可能无法消除带有TEL-AML1的胎儿白血病前期克隆,并且该克隆在治疗后发生的第二次独立转化事件会引发一种伪装成复发的新白血病。(《血液》。2001年;98:558 - 564)