TY - JOUR
T1 - Outcomes of paediatric patients with B-cell acute lymphocytic leukaemia with ABL-class fusion in the pre-tyrosine-kinase inhibitor era
T2 - a multicentre, retrospective, cohort study
AU - Ponte di Legno Childhood ALL Working Group
AU - den Boer, Monique L.
AU - Cario, Gunnar
AU - Moorman, Anthony V.
AU - Boer, Judith M.
AU - de Groot-Kruseman, Hester A.
AU - Fiocco, Marta
AU - Escherich, Gabriele
AU - Imamura, Toshihiko
AU - Yeoh, Allen
AU - Sutton, Rosemary
AU - Dalla-Pozza, Luciano
AU - Kiyokawa, Nobutaka
AU - Schrappe, Martin
AU - Roberts, Kathryn G.
AU - Mullighan, Charles G.
AU - Hunger, Stephen P.
AU - Vora, Ajay
AU - Attarbaschi, Andishe
AU - Zaliova, Marketa
AU - Elitzur, Sara
AU - Cazzaniga, Giovanni
AU - Biondi, Andrea
AU - Loh, Mignon L.
AU - Pieters, Rob
N1 - Funding Information:
GuC reports personal fees from Jazz Pharmaceuticals and Novartis outside the submitted work. SPH reports personal fees from Novartis and Amgen; and financial support from Amgen, outside the submitted work. CGM reports personal fees from Illumina, and grants from Loxo Oncology, during the conduct of the study; and grants from AbbVie and Pfizer, and personal fees from Amgen, outside the submitted work. MS reports grants from SHIRE, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Servier, SigmaTau, Amgen, and Novartis during the conduct of the study; and personal fees from SHIRE, Servier, and JazzPharma outside the submitted work. All other authors declare no competing interests.
Funding Information:
This study was financially supported by the Oncode Institute (MLdB), the Pediatric Cancer Foundation Rotterdam (MLdB and RP), the Dutch Cancer Society (MLdB), the Kika Foundation (MLDB, JMB), Deutsche Krebshilfe (GuC and MS), Blood Cancer UK (AVM), Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro (AIRC) grants (AIRC 2017 20564; CRUK/AIRC/FC AECC 22791 and AIRC 5 per mille 21147; AB), and Cancer Australia (APP1128727; RS). This study was also supported by grants from the National Cancer Institute (R35 CA197695; CGM) and National Institute of Health (U10 CA98543 and U10 CA180886 [Childhood Oncology Group Chair]; U10 CA98413 and U10 CA180899 [Childhood Oncology Group Statistics and Data Center]; and U24 CA114766 and U24-CA196173 [Childhood Oncology Group Specimen Banking]), and by funding from St Baldrick's Foundation (SH and MLL). SPH is the Jeffrey E Perelman Distinguished Chair in Pediatrics at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. MLL is the Benioff Chair of Children's Health and the Deborah and Arthur Ablin Endowed Chair for Pediatric Molecular Oncology at Benioff Children's Hospital. We acknowledge the Ponte di Legno Working Group and all affiliated study group members who contributed to this study. We also acknowledge the diagnostic and research laboratories linked to the Ponte di Legno Working Group members for ABL-class testing of patients. In particular, we acknowledge Aurélie van Kleef-Boeree (Dutch Childhood Oncology Group), Udo zur Stadt (Cooperative Study Group for Childhood Acut Lymphoblastic Leukaemia), Gianni Cazzaniga (Associazione Italiana di Ematologia Oncologia Pediatrica), Andishe Attarbaschi (Austria-Berlin-Frankfurt-Münster), Marketa Zaliova (Czech Republic-Berlin-Frankfurt-Münster), Sarah Elitzur (Israel-Berlin-Frankfurt-Münster), Claire Schwab and member laboratories of the UK Cancer Cytogenetics Group (UK-ALL), and Deborah White (Australian and New Zealand Children's Haematology/Oncology Group) for coordinating ABL-class fusion testing in their study groups. Finally, we acknowledge all data centres and data managers associated with the Ponte di Legno group for providing highly accurate clinical data linked to the patients in our cohort.
PY - 2021/1
Y1 - 2021/1
N2 - Background: ABL-class fusion genes other than BCR–ABL1 have been identified in approximately 3% of children with newly diagnosed acute lymphocytic leukaemia, and studies suggest that leukaemic cells carrying ABL-class fusions can be targeted successfully by tyrosine-kinase inhibitors. We aimed to establish the baseline characteristics and outcomes of paediatric patients with ABL-class fusion B-cell acute lymphocytic leukaemia in the pre-tyrosine-kinase inhibitor era. Methods: This multicentre, retrospective, cohort study included paediatric patients (aged 1–18 years) with newly diagnosed ABL-class fusion (ABL1 fusion-positive, ABL2 fusion-positive, CSF1R fusion-positive, and PDGFRB fusion-positive) B-cell acute lymphocytic leukaemia enrolled in clinical trials of multidrug chemotherapy done between Oct 3, 2000, and Aug 28, 2018, in which tyrosine-kinase inhibitors had not been given as a first-line treatment. Patients from 14 European, North American, and Asia-Pacific study groups of the Ponte di Legno group were included. No patients were excluded, and patients were followed up by individual study groups. Through the Ponte di Legno group, we collected data on the baseline characteristics of patients, including IKZF1, PAX5, and CDKN2A/B deletion status, and whether haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) had been done, as well as treatment outcomes, including complete remission, no response, relapse, early death, and treatment-related mortality, response to prednisone, and minimal residual disease (MRD) at end of induction therapy. 5-year event-free survival and 5-year overall survival were estimated by use of Kaplan-Meier methods, and the 5-year cumulative incidence of relapse was calculated by use of a competing risk model. Findings: We identified 122 paediatric patients with newly diagnosed ABL-class fusion B-cell acute lymphocytic leukaemia (77 from European study groups, 25 from North American study groups, and 20 from Asia-Pacific study groups). 64 (52%) of 122 patients were PDGFRB fusion-positive, 40 (33%) were ABL1 fusion-positive, ten (8%) were CSF1R fusion-positive, and eight (7%) were ABL2 fusion-positive. In all 122 patients, 5-year event-free survival was 59·1% (95% CI 50·5–69·1), 5-year overall survival was 76·1% (68·6–84·5), and the 5-year cumulative incidence of relapse was 31·0% (95% CI 22·4–40·1). MRD at the end of induction therapy was high (≥10−2 cells) in 61 (66%) of 93 patients, and most prevalent in patients with ABL2 fusions (six [86%] of 7 patients) and PDGFRB fusion-positive B-cell acute lymphocytic leukaemia (43 [88%] of 49 patients). MRD at the end of induction therapy of 10−2 cells or more was predictive of an unfavourable outcome (hazard ratio of event-free survival in patients with a MRD of ≥10−2 vs those with a MRD of <10−2 3·33 [95% CI 1·46–7·56], p=0·0039). Of the 36 (30%) of 119 patients who relapsed, 25 (69%) relapsed within 3 years of diagnosis. The 5-year cumulative incidence of relapse in 41 patients who underwent HSCT (17·8% [95% CI 7·7–31·3]) was lower than in the 43 patients who did not undergo HSCT (45·1% [28·4–60·5], p=0·013), but event-free survival and overall survival did not differ between these two groups. Interpretation: Children with ABL-class fusion B-cell acute lymphocytic leukaemia have poor outcomes when treated with regimens that do not contain a tyrosine-kinase inhibitor, despite the use of high-risk chemotherapy regimens and frequent HSCT upon first remission. Our findings provide a reference for evaluating the potential benefit of first-line tyrosine-kinase inhibitor treatment in patients with ABL-class fusion B-cell acute lymphocytic leukaemia. Funding: The Oncode Institute, Pediatric Cancer Foundation Rotterdam, Dutch Cancer Society, Kika Foundation, Deutsche Krebshilfe, Blood Cancer UK, Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro, Cancer Australia, National Cancer Institute, National Institute of Health, and St Baldrick's Foundation.
AB - Background: ABL-class fusion genes other than BCR–ABL1 have been identified in approximately 3% of children with newly diagnosed acute lymphocytic leukaemia, and studies suggest that leukaemic cells carrying ABL-class fusions can be targeted successfully by tyrosine-kinase inhibitors. We aimed to establish the baseline characteristics and outcomes of paediatric patients with ABL-class fusion B-cell acute lymphocytic leukaemia in the pre-tyrosine-kinase inhibitor era. Methods: This multicentre, retrospective, cohort study included paediatric patients (aged 1–18 years) with newly diagnosed ABL-class fusion (ABL1 fusion-positive, ABL2 fusion-positive, CSF1R fusion-positive, and PDGFRB fusion-positive) B-cell acute lymphocytic leukaemia enrolled in clinical trials of multidrug chemotherapy done between Oct 3, 2000, and Aug 28, 2018, in which tyrosine-kinase inhibitors had not been given as a first-line treatment. Patients from 14 European, North American, and Asia-Pacific study groups of the Ponte di Legno group were included. No patients were excluded, and patients were followed up by individual study groups. Through the Ponte di Legno group, we collected data on the baseline characteristics of patients, including IKZF1, PAX5, and CDKN2A/B deletion status, and whether haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) had been done, as well as treatment outcomes, including complete remission, no response, relapse, early death, and treatment-related mortality, response to prednisone, and minimal residual disease (MRD) at end of induction therapy. 5-year event-free survival and 5-year overall survival were estimated by use of Kaplan-Meier methods, and the 5-year cumulative incidence of relapse was calculated by use of a competing risk model. Findings: We identified 122 paediatric patients with newly diagnosed ABL-class fusion B-cell acute lymphocytic leukaemia (77 from European study groups, 25 from North American study groups, and 20 from Asia-Pacific study groups). 64 (52%) of 122 patients were PDGFRB fusion-positive, 40 (33%) were ABL1 fusion-positive, ten (8%) were CSF1R fusion-positive, and eight (7%) were ABL2 fusion-positive. In all 122 patients, 5-year event-free survival was 59·1% (95% CI 50·5–69·1), 5-year overall survival was 76·1% (68·6–84·5), and the 5-year cumulative incidence of relapse was 31·0% (95% CI 22·4–40·1). MRD at the end of induction therapy was high (≥10−2 cells) in 61 (66%) of 93 patients, and most prevalent in patients with ABL2 fusions (six [86%] of 7 patients) and PDGFRB fusion-positive B-cell acute lymphocytic leukaemia (43 [88%] of 49 patients). MRD at the end of induction therapy of 10−2 cells or more was predictive of an unfavourable outcome (hazard ratio of event-free survival in patients with a MRD of ≥10−2 vs those with a MRD of <10−2 3·33 [95% CI 1·46–7·56], p=0·0039). Of the 36 (30%) of 119 patients who relapsed, 25 (69%) relapsed within 3 years of diagnosis. The 5-year cumulative incidence of relapse in 41 patients who underwent HSCT (17·8% [95% CI 7·7–31·3]) was lower than in the 43 patients who did not undergo HSCT (45·1% [28·4–60·5], p=0·013), but event-free survival and overall survival did not differ between these two groups. Interpretation: Children with ABL-class fusion B-cell acute lymphocytic leukaemia have poor outcomes when treated with regimens that do not contain a tyrosine-kinase inhibitor, despite the use of high-risk chemotherapy regimens and frequent HSCT upon first remission. Our findings provide a reference for evaluating the potential benefit of first-line tyrosine-kinase inhibitor treatment in patients with ABL-class fusion B-cell acute lymphocytic leukaemia. Funding: The Oncode Institute, Pediatric Cancer Foundation Rotterdam, Dutch Cancer Society, Kika Foundation, Deutsche Krebshilfe, Blood Cancer UK, Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro, Cancer Australia, National Cancer Institute, National Institute of Health, and St Baldrick's Foundation.
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U2 - 10.1016/S2352-3026(20)30353-7
DO - 10.1016/S2352-3026(20)30353-7
M3 - Article
C2 - 33357483
AN - SCOPUS:85098152057
VL - 8
SP - e55-e66
JO - The Lancet Haematology
JF - The Lancet Haematology
SN - 2352-3026
IS - 1
ER -