Loffler's Endomyocardial Fibrosis, Eosinophilia, and Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 59 (6) ◽  
pp. 950-951
Author(s):  
Fabio Pereira ◽  
Hernan Moreno ◽  
William Crist ◽  
Rufino Ermocilla

Eosinophilia is a constant feature of Loffler's endomyocardial fibrosis.1,2 Three cases of this syndrome have been described in which acute lymphoblastic leukemia was concurrently present.3,4 Cytogenetic evidence in one of these cases suggested that the eosinophilia was "reactive" because the eosinophils had a normal karyotype while the lymphoblasts showed chromosomal aneuploidy.4 The subject of eosinophilia and eosinophilic syndromes has been extensively reviewed by others.5-8 The purpose of this report is to describe a boy with long-standing eosinophilia who presented with intractable heart failure, striking peripheral blood eosinophilia, and 38% lymphoblasts in the bone marrow. Current thoughts concerning the relationship of endomyocardial fibrosis, acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and eosinophilia are summarized.

Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. SCI-34-SCI-34
Author(s):  
Charles G. Mullighan

Abstract Patterns of mutation and clonal evolution in relapsed acute lymphoblastic leukemia Relapsed acute lymphoblastic leukemia remains a major cause of childhood cancer death, and this remains true despite the advent of new targeted and immunotherapeutic approaches. Recent years have witnessed the use of broad and deep serial genomic profiling approaches to dissect the relationship of genetic variegation to clonal evolution and relapse. Studies of over 90 children treated on St Jude Total Therapy protocols, incorporating genome, exome and transcriptome sequencing, coupled with limiting dilution xenografting to formally elucidate clonal structure have provided multiple key insights. In the majority of cases, the relapse-fated clone is a minor clone at diagnosis, that harbors resistance-enriched (and thus relapse-promoting) mutations at diagnosis, and/or acquires additional mutations the confer resistance after initial therapy. Approximately one third of cases relapse from a major clone, or show polyclonal evolution, and such cases typically have a shorter time to disease recurrence and relapse. A subset of cases exhibit complete discordance for somatic non-silent mutations, DNA copy number alterations and antigen receptor rearrangements between diagnosis and relapse, suggesting relapse represents a second leukemia; however such cases typically preserve the founding chromosomal rearrangement and a subset of non-coding mutations, indicating that relapse arises from an ancestral clone that has undergone divergent evolution early in leukemogenesis. Conversely, a subset of cases relapse with myeloid or lineage ambiguous leukemia but preserve genomic alterations indicating a common clonal origin but lineage plasticity: thus, careful genomic analysis is required to interpret the nature of disease recurrence/relapse. Approximately 15% of cases exhibit hypermutation, particularly in aneuploid leukemia and second or later relapse, associated with distinct mutational signatures and kinetics of hypermutation, thus identifying this process as a driver of treatment failure in a subset of ALL cases. Integrated analysis has identified over 80 recurrent targets of alteration at relapse that show variable patterns of enrichment in rising and falling clones. Importantly, several targets (e.g. NT5C2) are never identified at diagnosis despite deep sequencing approaches, suggesting adverse effects on leukemic fitness, and/or an absolute requirement of prior drug exposure to initiate mutagenesis. Integration of limiting dilution xenografting, coupled with genomic analysis of xenografts and drug exposure has not only formally confirmed and extended inferential clonal structures, but shown that in a subset of cases resistance is present at initial diagnosis, rather than being acquired after drug exposure. Finally, several groups have shown that the relationship of relapse-enriched mutations and relapse by be drug agnostic (e.g. IKZF1) or drug specific (e.g. NT5C2 and thiopurine resistance, and CREBBP and glucocorticoid resistance). As such mutations may now be detected at levels suitable for tracking of minimal residual disease, these insights offer the opportunity to identify the relapse-fated clone early in disease evolution, and modulate therapy accordingly to circumvent relapse. Disclosures Mullighan: Pfizer: Honoraria, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau; Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas: Consultancy; Loxo Oncology: Research Funding; Abbvie: Research Funding; Amgen: Honoraria, Speakers Bureau.


Blood ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 71 (5) ◽  
pp. 1495-1498 ◽  
Author(s):  
AG Turhan ◽  
CJ Eaves ◽  
DK Kalousek ◽  
AC Eaves ◽  
RK Humphries

Abstract Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1)-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) patients consistently show a rearrangement in a 5.8-kilobase length of chromosome 22, referred to as the breakpoint cluster region (bcr). In Ph1-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), the breakpoint in chromosome 22 is more heterogeneous and, in some instances, does not occur within this region. In such cases the cell of origin of the neoplastic clone and the relationship of the disease to CML has remained obscure. We have analyzed the bcr rearrangement in the malignant cells from three patients who presented with Ph1-positive ALL and who in cytogenetic studies had shown evidence of variable involvement of myeloid cells in the Ph1-positive clone. Rearrangements in bcr typical of most cases of CML were detected in purified granulocyte preparations from two of the ALL patients (nos. 1 and 2) and in the blasts from patient 3 at the time of her terminal relapse. In the same analysis the simultaneously obtained granulocytes from patient 3, however, did not show any evidence of bcr rearrangement. Patient 3 was also heterozygous for the BamHI polymorphism in the X- linked hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) gene, thus permitting a different method of clonal analysis based on methylation differences in active and inactive alleles. When DNA from her granulocytes that had shown no bcr rearrangement was hybridized to an HPRT probe, a pattern typical of a polyclonal population was seen. A similar pattern was exhibited by her marrow fibroblasts. In marked contrast, her simultaneously isolated blasts showed an unambiguous monoclonal pattern. These findings demonstrate the origin of the disease in the first two patients in a cell with myelopoietic as well as lymphopoietic potential and confirm the restricted lymphoid cell origin of the neoplastic clone in the third Ph1-positive ALL patient. Furthermore, they indicate that different target cells for transformation within the hematopoietic system may be affected by very similar bcr rearrangements.


2019 ◽  
Vol 66 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina M. Sharkey ◽  
Ashley H. Clawson ◽  
Larry L. Mullins ◽  
Tara M. Brinkman ◽  
Ching‐Hon Pui ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 71 (5) ◽  
pp. 1495-1498
Author(s):  
AG Turhan ◽  
CJ Eaves ◽  
DK Kalousek ◽  
AC Eaves ◽  
RK Humphries

Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1)-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) patients consistently show a rearrangement in a 5.8-kilobase length of chromosome 22, referred to as the breakpoint cluster region (bcr). In Ph1-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), the breakpoint in chromosome 22 is more heterogeneous and, in some instances, does not occur within this region. In such cases the cell of origin of the neoplastic clone and the relationship of the disease to CML has remained obscure. We have analyzed the bcr rearrangement in the malignant cells from three patients who presented with Ph1-positive ALL and who in cytogenetic studies had shown evidence of variable involvement of myeloid cells in the Ph1-positive clone. Rearrangements in bcr typical of most cases of CML were detected in purified granulocyte preparations from two of the ALL patients (nos. 1 and 2) and in the blasts from patient 3 at the time of her terminal relapse. In the same analysis the simultaneously obtained granulocytes from patient 3, however, did not show any evidence of bcr rearrangement. Patient 3 was also heterozygous for the BamHI polymorphism in the X- linked hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) gene, thus permitting a different method of clonal analysis based on methylation differences in active and inactive alleles. When DNA from her granulocytes that had shown no bcr rearrangement was hybridized to an HPRT probe, a pattern typical of a polyclonal population was seen. A similar pattern was exhibited by her marrow fibroblasts. In marked contrast, her simultaneously isolated blasts showed an unambiguous monoclonal pattern. These findings demonstrate the origin of the disease in the first two patients in a cell with myelopoietic as well as lymphopoietic potential and confirm the restricted lymphoid cell origin of the neoplastic clone in the third Ph1-positive ALL patient. Furthermore, they indicate that different target cells for transformation within the hematopoietic system may be affected by very similar bcr rearrangements.


Blood ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 73 (5) ◽  
pp. 1291-1297 ◽  
Author(s):  
LW Dow ◽  
N Tachibana ◽  
SC Raimondi ◽  
SJ Lauer ◽  
ON Witte ◽  
...  

Abstract We studied the relationship of direct karyotypes, determined at diagnosis and remission, to Abelson-related tyrosine kinase activity and the cytogenetic features of erythroid and myeloid colonies derived from remission marrow of six children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). These patients had either the characteristic Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1) [t(9;22)(q34;q11)] or cytogenetically similar variants with a 22q11 breakpoint but no detectable cytogenetic involvement of 9q34. The findings suggested two distinct subtypes of ALL: one defined by t(9;22)(q34;q11) and expression of P185BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase and one with variant karyotypes and no P185BCR-ABL expression. The former comprises cases with Ph1 + marrow cells and Ph1 + erythroid and (or) myeloid colonies in remission marrow and others in which the t(9;22) is undetectable in remission marrow cells. In the latter subgroup, the disease may reflect more extreme mosaicism with a similar stem cell that is cytogenetically undetectable. Variant karyotypes included a del(22)(q11) in one patient and a t(6;22;15;9) (q21;q11;q?22;q21) in another; in both instances, the malignant blast cells lacked P185BCR- ABL expression. Thus ALL with t(9;22)(q34;q11) should be distinguished from ALL with other involvement of the 22q11 breakpoint by molecular studies including protein expression. The diversity of karyotypic findings in cases with involvement of 22q11 suggests at least two mechanisms of leukemogenesis in patients with ALL defined by this breakpoint.


e-CliniC ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sharon Tewuh ◽  
Max F.J. Mantik ◽  
Sarah M. Warouw

Abstract: Acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL), also called acute lymphoblastic leukemia, is a cancer that starts from the initial stem cells of the lymphocytes in the bone marrow. This study aimed to determine the relationship of hemoglobin level with the chance of remission in children with ALL. This was an analytical retrospective study. Data were obtained from the medical records of Estella at Prof. Dr. R. D. Hospital period 2010-2014 with a total samples of 30 patients. The Fisher exact test showed a significant p value of 0.019 (p <0.05). Conclusion: There was a significant relationship between hemoglobin level and the chance of remission in patients with ALL. Keywords: hemoglobin level, remission, acute lymphoblastic leukemia Abstrak: Leukemia limfositik akut (LLA), juga disebut leukemia limfoblastik akut, adalah kanker yang dimulai dari sel stem awal dari limfosit dalam sumsum tulang. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengetahui hubungan kadar Hb dengan peluang remisi pada anak penderita LLA. Jenis penelitian ini ialah analitik retrospektif dengan menggunakan data rekam medik di ruang Estella RSUP Prof. Dr. R. D. Kandou periode 2010-2014 dengan sampel sebanyak 30 pasien. Hasil uji Fisher exact test menunjukkan nilai signifikasi p=0,019 (p<0,05). Simpulan: Terdapat hubungan bermakna antara kadar Hb dengan peluang remisi pada pasien LLA.Kata kunci: kadar Hb, remisi, LLA


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