We analyzed tandem duplication in the juxtamembrane (JM) domain of the FLT3 (FMS-like tyrosine kinase 3/FLK2, CD135) gene in 94 children with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and evaluated its correlation with clinical features. Longer polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products were observed in five patients; 1/3 of M0, 1/9 of M1, 1/39 of M2, 1/9 of M3 and 1/12 of M5. The sequence analyses of abnormal PCR products showed that all the abnormal products were derived from tandem duplications involving the JM domain and that all the lengthened sequences were in-frame as we previously reported. Statistical analyses revealed a significantly lower incidence of the tandem duplication in childhood AML patients than in adult patients (P Ͻ 0.05), and significantly shorter disease-free survival in patients with mutant FLT3 than in patients with wild-type FLT3 (P Ͻ 0.05). Our results suggest that the tandem duplication in the JM domain of the FLT3 gene is not a frequent phenomenon but might be a factor of poor prognosis in childhood patients with AML.
Summary. Perforin gene (PRF1) mutations appear to occur in about 30% of patients with haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH). We tested perforin expression and gene mutations in 14 HLH patients and six patients with EpsteinBarr virus-associated HLH (EBV-HLH) in Japan. Five of the 14 HLH patients had perforin abnormalities. The presence of PRF1 genetic abnormality correlated well with the lack of perforin expression as determined by flow cytometry. Sequencing showed that four patients had a compound heterozygous mutation while the fifth patient had a homozygous mutation. Three of the mutations we detected were novel. In contrast, none of the six EBV-HLH patients showed perforin abnormalities. Our data, combined with the PRF1 mutations in three previously reported Japanese patients, suggest that the 1090-1091delCT and 207delC mutations of the perforin gene are frequently present in Japanese HLH patients (62AE5% and 37AE5% respectively). Examination of the geographical origins of the ancestors in the perforin-mutant HLH patients revealed that they mostly came from the Western part of Japan, suggesting that the present-day cases may largely derive from a common ancestor.
The IVIG-containing treatment may be promising for ND-CNS-LCH; however, its effectiveness remains to be further tested in more patients as well as in a randomized trial.
This article adds the Japanese perspective to our knowledge of shared
decision-making (SDM) preferences by surveying patients with prostate cancer
(PCA) and physicians in Japan. In 2015, 103 Japanese patients with PCA were
asked about their SDM preferences by using an Internet-based 5-point-scale
questionnaire. Concurrently, 127 Japanese physicians were surveyed regarding
their perceptions of patient preferences on SDM. Drivers of preferences and
perceptions were analyzed using univariable ordinal logistic regression and
graphing the fitted response probabilities. Although 41% of both patients and
physicians expressed and expected a desire for active involvement in treatment
decisions (a higher rate than in a similar study for the United States in 2001),
almost half the Japanese patients preferred SDM, but only 33% of physicians
assumed this was their choice. That is, 29% of Japanese physicians
underestimated patients’ preference for involvement in making treatment
decisions. Patients with lower health-related quality of life (as measured by
the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Prostate [FACT-P]) expressed a
stronger preference for SDM. The study shows that the worse the medical
situation, the more patients with PCA prefer to be involved in the treatment
decision, yet physicians tend to underestimate the preferences of their
patients. Perhaps in contrast to common assumptions, Japanese patients are as
interested in being involved in decision making as are patients in the United
States.
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