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table1_Chemoresponse of de novo Acute Myeloid Leukemia to “7+3” Induction can Be Predicted by c-Myc-facilitated Cytogenetics.docx (12.75 kB)

table1_Chemoresponse of de novo Acute Myeloid Leukemia to “7+3” Induction can Be Predicted by c-Myc-facilitated Cytogenetics.docx

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posted on 2021-04-08, 12:45 authored by Tzu-Hung Hsiao, Ren Ching Wang, Tsai-Jung Lu, Chien-Hung Shih, Yu-Chen Su, Jia-Rong Tsai, Pei-Pei Jhan, Cai-Sian Lia, Han-Ni Chuang, Kuang-Hsi Chang, Chieh-Lin Teng

Background: Identifying patients with de novo acute myeloid leukemia (AML) who will probably respond to the “7 + 3” induction regimen remains an unsolved clinical challenge. This study aimed to identify whether c-Myc could facilitate cytogenetics to predict a “7 + 3” induction chemoresponse in de novo AML.

Methods: We stratified 75 untreated patients (24 and 51 from prospective and retrospective cohorts, respectively) with de novo AML who completed “7 + 3” induction into groups with and without complete remission (CR). We then compared Myc-associated molecular signatures between the groups in the prospective cohort after gene set enrichment analysis. The expression of c-Myc protein was assessed by immunohistochemical staining. We defined high c-Myc-immunopositivity as > 40% of bone marrow myeloblasts being c-Myc (+).

Results: Significantly more Myc gene expression was found in patients who did not achieve CR by “7 + 3” induction than those who did (2439.92 ± 1868.94 vs. 951.60 ± 780.68; p = 0.047). Expression of the Myc gene and c-Myc protein were positively correlated (r = 0.495; p = 0.014). Although the non-CR group did not express more c-Myc protein than the CR group (37.81 ± 25.13% vs. 29.04 ± 19.75%; p = 0.151), c-Myc-immunopositivity could be a surrogate to predict the “7 + 3” induction chemoresponse (specificity: 81.63%). More importantly, c-Myc-immunopositivity facilitated cytogenetics to predict a “7 + 3” induction chemoresponse by increasing specificity from 91.30 to 95.92%.

Conclusion: The “7 + 3” induction remains the standard of care for de novo AML patients, especially for those without a high c-Myc-immunopositivity and high-risk cytogenetics. However, different regimens might be considered for patients with high c-Myc-immunopositivity or high-risk cytogenetics.

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