• Dépistage, diagnostic, pronostic

  • Évaluation des technologies et des biomarqueurs

  • Leucémie

A six-gene leukemic stem cell score identifies high risk pediatric acute myeloid leukemia

Menée à partir de données portant sur 163 patients pédiatriques atteints d'une leucémie myéloïde aiguë et validée à partir de données portant sur 205 patients supplémentaires, cette étude met en évidence une association entre un système de score, basé sur l'expression de 6 gènes dans les cellules souches leucémiques (DNMT3B, GPR56 and CD34, SOCS2, SPINK2 et FAM30A), et un risque élevé de récidive

Recently, mRNA-expression signature enriched in LSCs was used to create a 17-gene leukemic stem cell (LSC17) score predictive of prognosis in adult AML. By fitting a Cox-LASSO regression model to the clinical outcome and gene-expression levels of LSC enriched genes in 163 pediatric participants of the AML02 multi-center clinical trial (NCT00136084), we developed a six-gene LSC score of prognostic value in pediatric AML (pLSC6). In the AML02 cohort, the 5-year event-free survival (EFS) of patients within low-pLSC6 group (n = 97) was 78.3 (95% CI = 70.5–86.9%) as compared with 34.5(95% CI = 24.7–48.2 %) in patients within high-pLSC6 group (n = 66 subjects), p < 0.00001. pLSC6 remained significantly associated with EFS and overall survival (OS) after adjusting for induction 1-MRD status, risk-group, FLT3-status, WBC-count at diagnosis and age. pLSC6 formula developed in the AML02 cohort was validated in the pediatric AML-TARGET project data (n = 205), confirming its prognostic value in both single-predictor and multiple-predictor Cox regression models. In both cohorts, pLSC6 predicted outcome of transplant patients, suggesting it as a useful criterion for transplant referrals. Our results suggest that pLSC6 score holds promise in redefining initial risk-stratification and identifying poor risk AML thereby providing guidance for developing novel treatment strategies.

Leukemia , résumé, 2019

Voir le bulletin