High hyperdiploid acute lymphoblastic leukaemia
1999-06-01 Barbara Gibbons   Affiliation1.NE London Regional Cytogenetics Laboratory 2nd Floor, Queen Square House Institute of Neurology Queen Square London WC1N 3BG, UK
Clinics and Pathology
Disease
acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL)
Phenotype stem cell origin
c-ALL or early pre-B immunophenotype
Epidemiology
this type of leukaemia is most common in children (20-30% of childhood ALL), peaking at 3-5 years although it is rare in infants and has a low incidence in adults (5% of adult ALL); excess of females
Clinics
high hyperdiploidy is associated with a low white cell count, and FAB type L1 or L2
Prognosis
prognosis for children is good with long term survival of 70%-80%; adults do less well although event free survival of 59% at 3 years has been reported; the good prognosis is thought to be related to leukaemic cell sensitivity to a number of anti-leukaemic drugs and the propensity of cells to respond by apoptosis; it is unclear why a proportion of patients fail to achieve long term remission but there is evidence that higher chromosome counts of >56 chromosomes and the presence of trisomies 4 and 10 may be associated with a good prognosis whereas the presence of i(17q) is clearly associated with a poor prognosis
Cytogenetics
Note
the hyperdiploid karyotype is thought to arise from a from a single step mechanism; maintenance of heterozygosity has been demonstrated suggesting that the hyperdiploidy does not arise from a near haploid precursor
Cytogenetics morphological
patients with hyperdiploidy of >50 chromosomes have clones of 51-68 chromosomes; although high hyperdiploid clones are rarely identical, they tend to show a pattern of chromosome gain with extra copies of chromosomes 4, 6, 10, 14, 18 and 21; the gains, apart from chromosome 21, more often result in trisomy rather than tetrasomy for the gained chromosomes
Cytogenetics molecular
high hyperdiploidy can be detected by application of a panel of probes which will detect the characteristic pattern of gain; this technique can be applied to interphase blasts but care must be exercised in interpretation and the non-random translocations such as t(9;22), t(1;19), t(12;21) and t(4;11) should be excluded by application of appropriate probes
Additional anomalies
translocations and other structural chromosome abnormalities are present in approximately half of high hyperdiploid cases; duplication 1q is the most common additional change; duplication of 1q, deletion of 6q and random structural abnormalities have no known prognostic impact; however, the presence of non-random translocations such as t(9;22), t(4;11), t(1;19) and t(12;21) indicate that the translocation is most likely the primary change and that the hyperdiploidy is probably a secondary event; in such cases the leukaemia should be classified according to the translocation rather than the ploidy group in order to assign the correct prognostic implications
Genes Involved and Proteins
Article Bibliography
| Pubmed ID | Last Year | Title | Authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| 9359508 | 1997 | Cytogenetics and prognosis in childhood lymphoblastic leukaemia: results of MRC UKALL X. Medical Research Council Working Party in Childhood Leukaemia. | Chessels JM et al |
| 9596644 | 1998 | Clinical significance of cytogenetic abnormalities in adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia. | Faderl S et al |
| 9864176 | 1999 | Hyperdiploid acute lymphoblastic leukemia with 51 to 65 chromosomes: a distinct biological entity with a marked propensity to undergo apoptosis. | Ito C et al |
| 7833478 | 1995 | Favorable prognosis of hyperdiploid common acute lymphoblastic leukemia may be explained by sensitivity to antimetabolites and other drugs: results of an in vitro study. | Kaspers GJ et al |
| 8956862 | 1996 | Dichotomy of hyperdiploid acute lymphoblastic leukemia on the basis of the distribution of gained chromosomes. | Mertens F et al |
| 1351763 | 1992 | Formation of a hyperdiploid karyotype in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. | Onodera N et al |
| 2207320 | 1990 | Biology and clinical significance of cytogenetic abnormalities in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. | Pui CH et al |
| 8637229 | 1996 | Heterogeneity of hyperdiploid (51-67) childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. | Raimondi SC et al |
| 9529139 | 1998 | Detection of hyperdiploid karyotypes (>50 chromosomes) in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). | Ritterbach J et al |
| 9054669 | 1997 | Cytogenetics adds independent prognostic information in adults with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia on MRC trial UKALL XA. MRC Adult Leukaemia Working Party. | Secker-Walker LM et al |
Citation
Barbara Gibbons
High hyperdiploid acute lymphoblastic leukaemia
Atlas Genet Cytogenet Oncol Haematol. 1999-06-01
Online version: http://atlasgeneticsoncology.org/haematological/1085/high-hyperdiploid-acute-lymphoblastic-leukaemia
