Although there are high survival rates for children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, their outcome is often counterbalanced by the burden of toxic eff ects. This is because reported frequencies vary widely across studies, partly because of diverse defi nitions of toxic eff ects. Using the Delphi method, 15 international childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia study groups assessed acute lymphoblastic leukaemia protocols to address toxic eff ects that were to be considered by the Ponte di Legno working group. 14 acute toxic eff ects (hypersensitivity to asparaginase, hyperlipidaemia, osteonecrosis, asparaginase-associated pancreatitis, arterial hypertension, posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome, seizures, depressed level of consciousness, methotrexate-related stroke-like syndrome, peripheral neuropathy, high-dose methotrexate-related nephrotoxicity, sinusoidal obstructive syndrome, thrombo embolism, and Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia) that are serious but too rare to be addressed comprehensively within any single group, or are deemed to need consensus defi nitions for reliable incidence comparisons, were selected for assessment. Our results showed that none of the protocols addressed all 14 toxic eff ects, that no two protocols shared identical defi nitions of all toxic eff ects, and that no toxic eff ect defi nition was shared by all protocols. Using the Delphi method over three face-to-face plenary meetings, consensus defi nitions were obtained for all 14 toxic eff ects. In the overall assessment of outcome of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia treatment, these expert opinion-based defi nitions will allow reliable comparisons of frequencies and severities of acute toxic eff ects across treatment protocols, and facilitate international research on cause, guidelines for treatment adaptation, preventive strategies, and development of consensus algorithms for reporting on acute lymphoblastic leukaemia treatment.
Sterile alpha motif domain protein 9 (SAMD9) and its paralogue SAMD9-like (SAMD9L) are cytoplasmic proteins encoded by two juxtaposed single-exon genes on chromosome 7q21. They share a 60% amino acid sequence identity and likely originated from a duplication of a common ancestral gene 1 . Their function remains enigmatic; they have been linked to tumor suppression 2 , inflammation 3 , stress response 4 , development 4 , endosomal fusion 5,6 and protein translation 7,8 . Both proteins were also shown to function as restriction factors forming a cross-species barrier for poxvirus infection [9][10][11][12] . Structural analysis of these large proteins has been limited to homology modeling, which predicted identical domains in either protein (SAM, ALBA2, SIR2, P-loop/ NTPase and OB-fold) 13 . Moreover, these genes exhibit tight regulation during embryonic development and transition to ubiquitous expression levels in adult tissues 14,15 .Notably, Samd9l-haploinsufficient mice develop myeloid neoplasia mimicking human MDS with monosomy 7 5 . Several groups reported germline SAMD9 or SAMD9L mutations (SAMD9/9L mut ) underlying new human syndromes with a propensity for cytopenia, bone marrow failure (BMF) and MDS with non-random monosomy 7 or deletion of 7q 6,16-28 . SAMD9 mutations (SAMD9 mut ) were initially linked to a fatal, early-onset MIRAGE syndrome (myelodysplasia, infections, restriction of growth, adrenal hypoplasia, genital phenotypes and enteropathy) 6,29 . In contrast, SAMD9L mutations (SAMD9L mut ) were originally described in families with a progressive neurological phenotype, multi-lineage cytopenia and bone marrow hypoplasia (ataxia-pancytopenia syndrome) 16,17 . Recent reports broadened this spectrum and found missense SAMD9/9L mut in non-syndromic familial MDS [30][31][32][33] , truncating SAMD9L mut in children with autoinflammatory panniculitis resembling CANDLE
Asparaginase-associated pancreatitis is a life-threatening toxicity to childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia treatment. To elucidate genetic predisposition and asparaginase-associated pancreatitis pathogenesis, ten trial groups contributed remission samples from patients aged 1.0−17.9 years treated for acute lymphoblastic leukemia between 2000 and 2016. Cases (n=244) were defined by the presence of at least two of the following criteria: (i) abdominal pain; (ii) levels of pancreatic enzymes ≥3 × upper normal limit; and (iii) imaging compatible with pancreatitis. Controls (n=1320) completed intended asparaginase therapy, with 78% receiving ≥8 injections of pegylated-asparaginase, without developing asparaginase-associated pancreatitis. rs62228256 on 20q13.2 showed the strongest association with the development of asparaginase-associated pancreatitis (odds ratio=3.75; P =5.2×10 −8 ). Moreover, rs13228878 (OR=0.61; P =7.1×10 −6 ) and rs10273639 (OR=0.62; P =1.1×10 −5 ) on 7q34 showed significant association with the risk of asparaginase-associated pancreatitis. A Dana Farber Cancer Institute ALL Consortium cohort consisting of patients treated on protocols between 1987 and 2004 (controls=285, cases=33), and the Children’s Oncology Group AALL0232 cohort (controls=2653, cases=76) were available as replication cohorts for the 20q13.2 and 7q34 variants, respectively. While rs62228256 was not validated as a risk factor ( P =0.77), both rs13228878 ( P =0.03) and rs10273639 ( P =0.04) were. rs13228878 and rs10273639 are in high linkage disequilibrium (r 2 =0.94) and associated with elevated expression of the PRSS1 gene, which encodes for trypsinogen, and are known risk variants for alcohol-associated and sporadic pancreatitis in adults. Intra-pancreatic trypsinogen cleavage to proteolytic trypsin induces autodigestion and pancreatitis. In conclusion, this study finds a shared genetic predisposition between asparaginase-associated pancreatitis and non-asparaginase-associated pancreatitis, and targeting the trypsinogen activation pathway may enable identification of effective interventions for asparaginase-associated pancreatitis.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.