AI Article Synopsis

  • * The most common mutations found were in the NPM1 (60.8%) and FLT3 (50.0%) genes for primary cases, while ASXL1 (48.5%) and TET2 (30.3%) were prevalent in secondary cases.
  • * The study revealed that 85% of CN-AML patients have mutations in key genes and highlighted that there’s no clear pattern of mutation changes when the disease progresses from MDS/CMML to AML.

Article Abstract

Acute myeloid leukemia patients with normal cytogenetics (CN-AML) account for almost half of AML cases. We aimed to study the frequency and relationship of a wide range of genes previously reported as mutated in AML (ASXL1, NPM1, FLT3, TET2, IDH1/2, RUNX1, DNMT3A, NRAS, JAK2, WT1, CBL, SF3B1, TP53, KRAS and MPL) in a series of 84 CN-AML cases. The most frequently mutated genes in primary cases were NPM1 (60.8%) and FLT3 (50.0%), and in secondary cases ASXL1 (48.5%) and TET2 (30.3%). We showed that 85% of CN-AML patients have mutations in at least one of ASXL1, NPM1, FLT3, TET2, IDH1/2 and/or RUNX1. Serial samples from 19 MDS/CMML cases that progressed to AML were analyzed for ASXL1/TET2/IDH1/2 mutations; seventeen cases presented mutations of at least one of these genes. However, there was no consistent pattern in mutation acquisition during disease progression. This report concerns the analysis of the largest number of gene mutations in CN-AML studied to date, and provides insight into the mutational profile of CN-AML.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3415392PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0042334PLOS

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