Searched for: person:carrow01
Up-Regulation of Genes Involved in Folate Metabolism Characterize Late but Not Early Relapse in Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia [Meeting Abstract]
Hogan, L; Bhojwani, D; Wang, JH; Morrison, D; Yang, JJ; Zhang, YT; Zavadil, J; Condos, G; Hunger, SP; Willman, CL; Relling, MV; Raetz, E; Carroll, WL
ISI:000272725802101
ISSN: 0006-4971
CID: 109987
Gene Expression Profiling in Down Syndrome Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Identifies Distinct Profiles Associated with CRLF2 Expression Status [Meeting Abstract]
Rabin, KR; Wang, JH; Meyer, J; Loudin, MG; Bhojwani, D; Morrison, D; Heerema, NA; Carroll, AJ; Pession, A; Basso, G; Mullighan, CG; Hunger, SP; Carroll, WL
ISI:000272725802757
ISSN: 0006-4971
CID: 109990
Amplification of AML1 Does Not Impact Early Outcome of Children with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL) Treated with Risk-Directed Chemotherapy: A Report From the Children's Oncology Group (COG) [Meeting Abstract]
Heerema, NA; Carroll, AJ; Borowitz, MJ; Devidas, M; Larson, EC; Loh, M; Mattano, LA; Maloney, K; Raetz, E; Wood, B; Winick, NJ; Hunger, SP; Carroll, WL
ISI:000272725803153
ISSN: 0006-4971
CID: 109992
AAML0523: A Report From the Children's Oncology Group On the Safety of Clofarabine in Combination with Cytarabine in Pediatric Patients with Relapsed Acute Leukemia [Meeting Abstract]
Cooper, T; Alonzo, TA; Gerbing, RB; Perentesis, J; Whitlock, JA; Raetz, E; Carroll, WL; Gamis, AS; Razzouk, BI
ISI:000272725803631
ISSN: 0006-4971
CID: 109994
Report On Excessive Induction Toxicity in Infants with ALL Enrolled On COG Protocol AALL0631: A Children's Oncology Group Study [Meeting Abstract]
Brown, P; Hilden, JM; Dreyer, ZE; Winick, NJ; Salzer, W; Raetz, E; Sung, L; Zaoutis, TE; Jones, T; Devidas, M; De Lorenzo, P; Valsecchi, MG; Pieters, R; Carroll, WL; Hunger, SP
ISI:000272725803646
ISSN: 0006-4971
CID: 109995
Improved early event-free survival with imatinib in Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia: a children's oncology group study
Schultz, Kirk R; Bowman, W Paul; Aledo, Alexander; Slayton, William B; Sather, Harland; Devidas, Meenakshi; Wang, Chenguang; Davies, Stella M; Gaynon, Paul S; Trigg, Michael; Rutledge, Robert; Burden, Laura; Jorstad, Dean; Carroll, Andrew; Heerema, Nyla A; Winick, Naomi; Borowitz, Michael J; Hunger, Stephen P; Carroll, William L; Camitta, Bruce
PURPOSE: Imatinib mesylate is a targeted agent that may be used against Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), one of the highest risk pediatric ALL groups. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We evaluated whether imatinib (340 mg/m(2)/d) with an intensive chemotherapy regimen improved outcome in children ages 1 to 21 years with Ph+ ALL (N = 92) and compared toxicities to Ph- ALL patients (N = 65) given the same chemotherapy without imatinib. Exposure to imatinib was increased progressively in five patient cohorts that received imatinib from 42 (cohort 1; n = 7) to 280 continuous days (cohort 5; n = 50) before maintenance therapy. Patients with human leukocyte antigen (HLA) -identical sibling donors underwent blood and marrow transplantation (BMT) with imatinib given for 6 months following BMT. RESULTS: Continuous imatinib exposure improved outcome in cohort 5 patients with a 3-year event-free survival (EFS) of 80% +/- 11% (95% CI, 64% to 90%), more than twice historical controls (35% +/- 4%; P < .0001). Three-year EFS was similar for patients in cohort 5 treated with chemotherapy plus imatinib (88% +/- 11%; 95% CI, 66% to 96%) or sibling donor BMT (57% +/- 22%; 95% CI, 30.4% to 76.1%). There were no significant toxicities associated with adding imatinib to intensive chemotherapy. The higher imatinib dosing in cohort 5 appears to improve survival by having an impact on the outcome of children with a higher burden of minimal residual disease after induction. CONCLUSION: Imatinib plus intensive chemotherapy improved 3-year EFS in children and adolescents with Ph+ ALL, with no appreciable increase in toxicity. BMT plus imatinib offered no advantage over BMT alone. Additional follow-up is required to determine the impact of this treatment on long-term EFS and determine whether chemotherapy plus imatinib can replace BMT.
PMCID:2773475
PMID: 19805687
ISSN: 0732-183x
CID: 453622
Rearrangement of CRLF2 in B-progenitor- and Down syndrome-associated acute lymphoblastic leukemia
Mullighan, Charles G; Collins-Underwood, J Racquel; Phillips, Letha A A; Loudin, Michael G; Liu, Wei; Zhang, Jinghui; Ma, Jing; Coustan-Smith, Elaine; Harvey, Richard C; Willman, Cheryl L; Mikhail, Fady M; Meyer, Julia; Carroll, Andrew J; Williams, Richard T; Cheng, Jinjun; Heerema, Nyla A; Basso, Giuseppe; Pession, Andrea; Pui, Ching-Hon; Raimondi, Susana C; Hunger, Stephen P; Downing, James R; Carroll, William L; Rabin, Karen R
Aneuploidy and translocations are hallmarks of B-progenitor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), but many individuals with this cancer lack recurring chromosomal alterations. Here we report a recurring interstitial deletion of the pseudoautosomal region 1 of chromosomes X and Y in B-progenitor ALL that juxtaposes the first, noncoding exon of P2RY8 with the coding region of CRLF2. We identified the P2RY8-CRLF2 fusion in 7% of individuals with B-progenitor ALL and 53% of individuals with ALL associated with Down syndrome. CRLF2 alteration was associated with activating JAK mutations, and expression of human P2RY8-CRLF2 together with mutated mouse Jak2 resulted in constitutive Jak-Stat activation and cytokine-independent growth of Ba/F3 cells overexpressing interleukin-7 receptor alpha. Our findings indicate that these two genetic lesions together contribute to leukemogenesis in B-progenitor ALL.
PMCID:2783810
PMID: 19838194
ISSN: 1061-4036
CID: 453612
Germline genomic variants associated with childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia
Trevino, Lisa R; Yang, Wenjian; French, Deborah; Hunger, Stephen P; Carroll, William L; Devidas, Meenakshi; Willman, Cheryl; Neale, Geoffrey; Downing, James; Raimondi, Susana C; Pui, Ching-Hon; Evans, William E; Relling, Mary V
Using the Affymetrix 500K Mapping array and publicly available genotypes, we identified 18 SNPs whose allele frequency differed significantly(P < 1 x 10(-5)) between pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cases (n = 317) and non-ALL controls (n = 17,958). Two SNPs in ARID5B not only differed between ALL and non-ALL groups (rs10821936, P = 1.4 x 10(-15), odds ratio (OR) = 1.91; rs10994982, P = 5.7 x 10(-9), OR = 1.62) but also distinguished B-hyperdiploid ALL from other subtypes (rs10821936, P = 1.62 x 10(-5), OR = 2.17; rs10994982, P = 0.003, OR 1.72). These ARID5B SNPs also distinguished B-hyperdiploid ALL from other subtypes in an independent validation cohort (n = 124 children with ALL; P = 0.003 and P = 0.0008, OR 2.45 and 2.86, respectively) and were associated with methotrexate accumulation and gene expression pattern in leukemic lymphoblasts. We conclude that germline variants affect susceptibility to, and characteristics of, specific ALL subtypes.
PMCID:2762391
PMID: 19684603
ISSN: 1061-4036
CID: 453642
JAK mutations in high-risk childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia
Mullighan, Charles G; Zhang, Jinghui; Harvey, Richard C; Collins-Underwood, J Racquel; Schulman, Brenda A; Phillips, Letha A; Tasian, Sarah K; Loh, Mignon L; Su, Xiaoping; Liu, Wei; Devidas, Meenakshi; Atlas, Susan R; Chen, I-Ming; Clifford, Robert J; Gerhard, Daniela S; Carroll, William L; Reaman, Gregory H; Smith, Malcolm; Downing, James R; Hunger, Stephen P; Willman, Cheryl L
Pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a heterogeneous disease consisting of distinct clinical and biological subtypes that are characterized by specific chromosomal abnormalities or gene mutations. Mutation of genes encoding tyrosine kinases is uncommon in ALL, with the exception of Philadelphia chromosome-positive ALL, where the t(9,22)(q34;q11) translocation encodes the constitutively active BCR-ABL1 tyrosine kinase. We recently identified a poor prognostic subgroup of pediatric BCR-ABL1-negative ALL patients characterized by deletion of IKZF1 (encoding the lymphoid transcription factor IKAROS) and a gene expression signature similar to BCR-ABL1-positive ALL, raising the possibility of activated tyrosine kinase signaling within this leukemia subtype. Here, we report activating mutations in the Janus kinases JAK1 (n = 3), JAK2 (n = 16), and JAK3 (n = 1) in 20 (10.7%) of 187 BCR-ABL1-negative, high-risk pediatric ALL cases. The JAK1 and JAK2 mutations involved highly conserved residues in the kinase and pseudokinase domains and resulted in constitutive JAK-STAT activation and growth factor independence of Ba/F3-EpoR cells. The presence of JAK mutations was significantly associated with alteration of IKZF1 (70% of all JAK-mutated cases and 87.5% of cases with JAK2 mutations; P = 0.001) and deletion of CDKN2A/B (70% of all JAK-mutated cases and 68.9% of JAK2-mutated cases). The JAK-mutated cases had a gene expression signature similar to BCR-ABL1 pediatric ALL, and they had a poor outcome. These results suggest that inhibition of JAK signaling is a logical target for therapeutic intervention in JAK mutated ALL.
PMCID:2695045
PMID: 19470474
ISSN: 0027-8424
CID: 453652
(PLATFORM 302C) ANTISENSE TECHNOLOGY TARGETING AN ANTI-APOPTOTIC GENE IMPROVES LEUKEMIC CELL DEATH IN ALL CELL LINES AND MICE [Meeting Abstract]
Hogan, LE; Teachey, DT; Germino, N; Moskowitz, N; Condos, G; Belitskaya-Levy, H; Wang, JH; Bhojwani, D; Horton, TM; Sapra, P; Horak, I; Raetz, E; Grupp, SA; Carroll, W; Morrison, D
ISI:000264515600015
ISSN: 1545-5009
CID: 97794