Impact of trisomy 19 on outcome according to genetic makeup in patients with acute myeloid leukemia
Kayser, Sabine; Martínez-Cuadrón, David; Rodríguez-Veiga, Rebeca; Haenel, Mathias; Tormo, Mar; Schaefer-Eckart, Kerstin; Botella, Carmen; Stoelzel, Friedrich; Bernal-del-Castillo, Teresa; Keller, Ulrich; Rodríguez-Medina, Carlos; Held, Gerhard; Amigo, María-Luz; Schliemann, Christoph; Colorado, Mercedes; Kaufmann, Martín; Barrios-García, Manuel; Krause, Stefan-W; Goerner, Martín; Jost, Edgar; Steffen, Bjoern; Zukunft, Sven; Platzbecker, Uwe; Ho, Anthony-D; Baldus, Claudia-D; Serve, Hubert; Mueller-Tidow, Carsten; Thiede, Christian; Bornhaeuser, Martín; Montesinos, Pau; Roellig, Christoph; Schlenk, Richard-F
Fecha:
2023-08
Resumen:
We retrospectively studied 97 acute myeloid leukemia patients with trisomy 19 (median age at diagnosis 57 years; range, 17- 83 years) treated between 2001 and 2019 within two multicenter study groups. Trisomy 19 occurred alone in ten (10.5%) patients, with additional abnormalities being present in non-complex karyotypes in eight (8%) patients and in complex karyotypes in 79 (82%) patients. Altogether, karyotypes characterized by trisomies only were present in 27 (28%) patients. Data on response and outcome of intensively treated patients were available for 92 cases. The median follow-up was 6.4 years (95% confidence interval [95% CI]: 2.9-9.0 years). The complete remission (CR) rate after induction therapy was 52% (48 patients); the early death rate was 10% (n=9). Notably, patients with trisomy 19 as the sole abnormality had a CR rate of 89%. Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HCT) was performed in 34 (35%) patients (CR, n=19; active disease, n=15). Five-year relapse-free and overall survival rates were 26% (95% CI: 16-43%) and 20% (95% CI: 13-31%), respectively. Overall survival rates were significantly higher in patients with trisomy 19 as the sole abnormality or within karyotypes characterized by trisomies only (P=0.05). An Andersen-Gill model including allo-HCT as a time-dependent covariable on overall survival revealed that trisomy 19 as the sole abnormality or within karyotypes characterized by trisomies only was a favorable factor (hazard ratio [HR]=0.47; P=0.021); higher age at diagnosis had an adverse impact (10 years difference; HR=1.29; P=0.002), whereas allo-HCT did not have a beneficial impact (odds ratio=1.45; P=0.21). In our cohort, patients with trisomy 19 as the sole abnormality or within karyotypes characterized by trisomies only had a high CR rate and better clinical outcome.
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