Department of Pediatric Oncology/Hematology, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Augustenburgerplatz 1, 13353 Berlin, Germany.
J Clin Oncol. 2011 Aug 10;29(23):3185-93. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2011.34.8144. Epub 2011 Jul 11.
In the clinical management of children with relapsed acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), treatment resistance remains a major challenge. Alterations of the TP53 gene are frequently associated with resistance to chemotherapy, but their significance in relapsed childhood ALL has remained controversial because of small studies.
Therefore, we systematically studied 265 first-relapse patients enrolled in the German Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Relapse Berlin-Frankfurt-Mü nster 2002 (ALL-REZ BFM 2002) trial for sequence and copy number alterations of the TP53 gene by using direct sequencing and multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification.
We observed copy number and sequence alterations of TP53 in 12.4% (27 of 218) of patients with B-cell precursor ALL and 6.4% (three of 47) of patients with T-cell ALL relapse. Backtracking to initial ALL in 23 matched samples revealed that 54% of all TP53 alterations were gained at relapse. Within B-cell precursor ALL, TP53 alterations were consistently associated with nonresponse to chemotherapy (P < .001) and poor event-free survival (P < .001) and overall survival rates (P = .002). TP53 alterations also had a significant impact on survival within intermediate-risk (S2) and high-risk (S3/S4) relapse patients (P = .007 and P = .019, respectively). This prognostic significance of TP53 alterations was confirmed in multivariate analysis. Besides their clinical impact, TP53 alterations were associated with a higher fraction of leukemic cells in S/G(2)-M phase of the cell cycle at relapse diagnosis.
Alterations of the TP53 gene are of particular importance in the relapse stage of childhood ALL, in which they independently predict high risk of treatment failure in a significant number of patients. Therefore, they will aid in future risk assessment of children with ALL relapse.
在儿童复发急性淋巴细胞白血病(ALL)的临床治疗中,治疗耐药仍然是一个主要挑战。TP53 基因的改变通常与化疗耐药有关,但由于研究规模较小,其在复发儿童 ALL 中的意义仍存在争议。
因此,我们通过直接测序和多重连接依赖性探针扩增,对德国急性淋巴细胞白血病复发柏林-法兰克福-慕尼黑 2002 年(ALL-REZ BFM 2002)试验中 265 例首次复发的患者进行了 TP53 基因的序列和拷贝数改变的系统研究。
我们观察到 B 细胞前体 ALL 患者中 12.4%(218 例中有 27 例)和 T 细胞 ALL 复发患者中 6.4%(47 例中有 3 例)存在 TP53 拷贝数和序列改变。在 23 例匹配样本中回溯到初始 ALL 时,发现所有 TP53 改变的 54%是在复发时获得的。在 B 细胞前体 ALL 中,TP53 改变与化疗无反应(P<0.001)、无事件生存(P<0.001)和总生存(P=0.002)率差密切相关。TP53 改变在中危(S2)和高危(S3/S4)复发患者的生存中也有显著影响(P=0.007 和 P=0.019)。在多变量分析中也证实了 TP53 改变的这种预后意义。除了它们的临床影响外,TP53 改变与复发时细胞周期 S/G2-M 期白血病细胞的比例较高有关。
TP53 基因的改变在儿童 ALL 的复发阶段尤其重要,它们独立地预测了许多患者治疗失败的高风险。因此,它们将有助于未来评估儿童 ALL 复发的风险。