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Prognostic significance of ETP phenotype and minimal residual disease in T-ALL: a Children's Oncology Group study

BLOOD(2023)

Cited 3|Views59
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Abstract
The early thymic precursor (ETP) immunophenotype was previously reported to confer poor outcome in T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). Between 2009 and 2014, 1256 newly diagnosed children and young adults enrolled in Children's Oncology Group (COG) AALL0434 were assessed for ETP status and minimal residual disease (MRD) using flow cytometry at a central reference laboratory. The subject phenotypes were categorized as ETP (n = 145; 11.5%), near-ETP (n = 209; 16.7%), or non-ETP (n = 902; 71.8%). Despite higher rates of induction failure for ETP (6.2%) and near-ETP (6.2%) than non-ETP (1.2%; P < .0001), all 3 groups showed excellent 5-year event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS): ETP (80.4% +/- 3.9% and 86.8 +/- 3.4%, respectively), near-ETP (81.1% +/- 3.3% and 89.6% +/- 2.6%, respectively), and non-ETP (85.3% +/- 1.4% and 90.0% +/- 1.2%, respectively; P = .1679 and P = .3297, respectively). There was no difference in EFS or OS for subjects with a day-29 MRD <0.01% vs 0.01% to 0.1%. However, day-29 MRD >= 0.1% was associated with inferior EFS and OS for patients with near-ETP and non-ETP, but not for those with ETP. For subjects with day-29 MRD >= 1%, end-consolidation MRD >= 0.01% was a striking predictor of inferior EFS (80.9% +/- 4.1% vs 52.4% +/- 8.1%, respectively; P = .0001). When considered as a single variable, subjects with all 3 T-ALL phenotypes had similar outcomes and subjects with persistent postinduction disease had inferior outcomes, regardless of their ETP phenotype.
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Key words
etp phenotype,prognostic significance,oncology group study,minimal residual disease,t-all
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