95% of Chronic Myelocytic (CML) and 15-25% of Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL) patients are Ph1 producing a fusion transcript between the abl proto-oncogene and the bcr gene.
In 16 samples of normal karyotype ALL (n=9), ALLwith no cytogentic result (n=4) and CML with no Philadelphia chromosome (n=3), fusion transcripts were detected.
The Japan Adult Leukemia Study Group (JALSG) has recently started a phase 2 trial with intensive chemotherapy and imatinib for newly diagnosed BCR-AB-positive ALL patients, and we present here the interim results for the first 24 patients.
Telomerase activity was significantly lower in Philadelphia chromosome-negative/IKAROS-deleted (BCR-ABL1(-)/IKAROS(del)) cases compared to Philadelphia chromosome-positive (BCR-ABL1+) BCP-ALLs.
Southern blot analysis revealed no rearrangement in Mbcr1, and direct sequencing of the PCR product confirmed it to be the ALL-type mbcr1 fusion mRNA with the first exon of the BCR gene fused to ABL exon a2.
This case seems to represent an exceedingly rare instance of Ph1(+),i(17q) ALL in which the differential diagnosis between blast transformation of CML and Ph1(+) ALL was initially difficult to make.
Rearrangements in the BCR gene first intron, the so-called bcr2 and bcr3 regions, were detected in two other cases, one with an acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and one with mixed acute leukemia.
A series of five single-copy genomic probes from the 70-kilobase first intron of BCR were used to localize rearrangements in 8 of 10 Philadelphia chromosome-positive ALLs.
Twenty patients had chronic myeloid leukemia in blast crisis (CML-BC), three had Ph+ de novo acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL), and five had de novo acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL).
In lymphoblastic leukemias, there are two molecular subtypes of the Ph1 chromosome, one with a rearrangement of the breakpoint cluster region (bcr) of the BCR gene, producing the same 8.5-kilobase BCR-ABL fusion mRNA seen in chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), and the other, without a bcr rearrangement, producing a 7.0-kilobase BCR-ABL fusion mRNA that is seen only in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL).
Within the group of Ph'-positive ALL patients having a bcr gene breakpoint, a correlation appears to exist between the age of the patient and the location of the breakpoint within the gene: all or the vast majority of pediatric patients analyzed to date do not have a Mbcr breakpoint as found in CML and in adult ALL.
We demonstrated the dPCR is high-sensitive (able to detect a single copy of BCR-ABL1) and reliable (results are comparable to those obtained by BCR-ABL1 quantification with conventional technology), allowing an accurate monitoring of BCR-ABL1-positive ALL patients in complete remission.
We have now used the same technique, reverse transcription/polymerase chain reaction amplification of ABL-BCR transcripts, to study nine patients with Philadelphia (Ph) chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL); seven expressed the P190 and two the P210 type of BCR-ABL fusion protein.
To characterize the subset of ALL with normal karyotype or failed CBA, we performed fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) or PCR for BCR-ABL1 and MLL rearrangements as well as array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) in 186 adult patients.
In this cohort of Taiwanese children, the relative frequencies of the 4 translocations of B-lineage ALL were 8% with ALL-type t(9;22)/BCR-ABL1, 4% with (1;19)/TCF-PBX1, 2% with t(4;11)/MLL-AF4, and 17.6% with t(12;21)/ETV6-RUNX1.
Phosphatase of regenerating liver-3 <i>(PRL-3/PTP4A3)</i> is upregulated in multiple cancers, including BCR-ABL1- and ETV6-RUNX-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL).
Among hematopoietic malignancies, the highest frequencies of p15del and p16del were seen in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) (>30%) with striking rates in T-ALL (>50%), but also high rates in B cell precursor (BCP)-ALL (>20%); the rates of deletions in chronic lymphoid leukemia (CLL), multiple myeloma, acute and chronic myeloid leukemia (AML and CML), and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) were rather low, only some B cell and T cell lymphomas showed increased frequencies.
The Philadelphia chromosome (Ph) encoding the oncogenic BCR-ABL1 kinase defines a subset of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) with a particularly unfavorable prognosis.