TY - JOUR
T1 - Cytogenetic studies in acute lymphocytic leukemia
T2 - Special emphasis in long‐term survival
AU - Whang‐Peng, Jacqueline
AU - Knutsen, Turid
AU - Ziegler, John
AU - Leventhal, Brigid
PY - 1976/1/1
Y1 - 1976/1/1
N2 - Cytogenetic studies were performed in 331 patients with ALL diagnosed at the National Institutes of Health between January 1961 and January 1976. Four patients had constitutionally abnormal genotypes, three had Down's syndrome, and one had a D/G translocation. Aneuploidy was observed in the pretreatment bone marrow in 49/115 (42.6%) of the patients and at some stage of disease in 54.1% of the patients. Aneuploidy in this series exhibited several general characteristics: aneuploid cells usually coexist with normal stem cells, hyperdiploidy is predominant, and wide ranging aneuploidy clusters around a major cell line. The most common chromosomal group involved in aneuploidy is the G group (p = 0.001) and the next most common is the B group (p = 0.01). Aneuploidy disappeared after successful achievement of remission, and new clones developed in 12 patients during relapse. Two of the four patients originally thought to have a Ph1 chromosome, on trypsin Giemsa banding were proved to have a 21q‐ chromosome. A higher incidence of aneuploidy was noted in patients under one year or more than 20 years of age and was also higher in patients with low or elevated WBCs at diagnosis. The appearance of aneuploid cells in the bone marrow at the onset or later in the disease is of no prognostic significance but persistence of these lines and the development of total aneuploidy signals a poor prognosis. Eradication of aneuploid cells is therefore essential for the achievement of a long remission and progress to a permanent cure.
AB - Cytogenetic studies were performed in 331 patients with ALL diagnosed at the National Institutes of Health between January 1961 and January 1976. Four patients had constitutionally abnormal genotypes, three had Down's syndrome, and one had a D/G translocation. Aneuploidy was observed in the pretreatment bone marrow in 49/115 (42.6%) of the patients and at some stage of disease in 54.1% of the patients. Aneuploidy in this series exhibited several general characteristics: aneuploid cells usually coexist with normal stem cells, hyperdiploidy is predominant, and wide ranging aneuploidy clusters around a major cell line. The most common chromosomal group involved in aneuploidy is the G group (p = 0.001) and the next most common is the B group (p = 0.01). Aneuploidy disappeared after successful achievement of remission, and new clones developed in 12 patients during relapse. Two of the four patients originally thought to have a Ph1 chromosome, on trypsin Giemsa banding were proved to have a 21q‐ chromosome. A higher incidence of aneuploidy was noted in patients under one year or more than 20 years of age and was also higher in patients with low or elevated WBCs at diagnosis. The appearance of aneuploid cells in the bone marrow at the onset or later in the disease is of no prognostic significance but persistence of these lines and the development of total aneuploidy signals a poor prognosis. Eradication of aneuploid cells is therefore essential for the achievement of a long remission and progress to a permanent cure.
KW - acute lymphocytic leukemia
KW - aneuploidy survival
KW - cytogenetic study
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U2 - 10.1002/mpo.2950020315
DO - 10.1002/mpo.2950020315
M3 - Article
C2 - 1068341
AN - SCOPUS:0017180762
SN - 0098-1532
VL - 2
SP - 333
EP - 351
JO - Medical and Pediatric Oncology
JF - Medical and Pediatric Oncology
IS - 3
ER -