학술논문

Recurrent finding of the FIP1L1-PDGFRA fusion gene in eosinophilia-associated acute myeloid leukemia and lymphoblastic T-cell lymphoma.
Document Type
Article
Source
Leukemia (08876924). Jun2007, Vol. 21 Issue 6, p1183-1188. 6p. 2 Diagrams, 1 Chart.
Subject
*EOSINOPHILIA
*EOSINOPHIL disorders
*ACUTE myeloid leukemia
*LYMPHOBLASTIC leukemia
*T cells
*LYMPHOMAS
*LEUKEMIA
Language
ISSN
0887-6924
Abstract
The FIP1L1-PDGFRA fusion gene has been described in patients with eosinophilia-associated myeloproliferative disorders (Eos-MPD). Here, we report on seven FIP1L1-PDGFRA-positive patients who presented with acute myeloid leukemia (AML, n=5) or lymphoblastic T-cell non-Hodgkin-lymphoma (n=2) in conjunction with AML or Eos-MPD. All patients were male, the median age was 58 years (range, 40–66). AML patients were negative for common mutations of FLT3, NRAS, NPM1, KIT, MLL and JAK2; one patient revealed a splice mutation of RUNX1 exon 7. Patients were treated with imatinib (100 mg, n=5; 400 mg, n=2) either as monotherapy (n=2), as maintenance treatment after intensive chemotherapy (n=3) or in overt relapse 43 and 72 months, respectively, after primary diagnosis and treatment of FIP1L1-PDGFRA-positive disease (n=2). All patients are alive, disease-free and in complete hematologic and complete molecular remission after a median time of 20 months (range, 9–36) on imatinib. The median time to achievement of complete molecular remission was 6 months (range, 1–14). We conclude that all eosinophilia-associated hematological malignancies should be screened for the presence of the FIP1L1-PDGFRA fusion gene as they are excellent candidates for treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors even if they present with an aggressive phenotype such as AML.Leukemia (2007) 21, 1183–1188. doi:10.1038/sj.leu.2404662; published online 22 March 2007 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]