Whole Exome Sequencing of Intermediate-Risk Acute Myeloid Leukemia Without Recurrent Genetic Abnormalities Offers Deeper Insights into New Diagnostic Classifications
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Chemistry
Molecular Biology
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Two new diagnostic classifications of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) were published in 2022 to update current knowledge on disease biology. In previous 2017-edition categories of AML with myelodysplasia-related changes, AML was not otherwise specified, but AML with mutated experienced profound changes. We performed whole exome sequencing on a cohort of 69 patients with cytogenetic intermediate-risk AML that belonged to these diagnostic categories to correlate their mutational pattern and copy-number alterations with their new diagnostic distribution. Our results show that 45% of patients changed their diagnostic category, being AML myelodysplasia-related the most enlarged, mainly due to a high frequency of myelodysplasia-related mutations (58% of patients). These showed a good correlation with multilineage dysplasia and/or myelodysplastic syndrome history, but at the same time, 21% of de novo patients without dysplasia also presented them. was the most frequently mutated gene, with a high co-occurrence rate with other myelodysplasia-related mutations. We found a high prevalence of copy-neutral loss of heterozygosity, frequently inducing a homozygous state in particular mutated genes. Mild differences in current classifications explain the diagnostic disparity in 10% of patients, claiming a forthcoming unified classification.
Advances in DNA/RNA Sequencing and Their Applications in Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML).
Ahmed F, Zhong J Int J Mol Sci. 2025; 26(1.
PMID: 39795930 PMC: 11720148. DOI: 10.3390/ijms26010071.