Litcius/Paper detail

The Current Genomic and Molecular Landscape of Philadelphia-like Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

Parveen Shiraz, Kimberly J. Payne, Lori Muffly

2020International Journal of Molecular Sciences40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Philadelphia (Ph)-like acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a high-risk B-cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (B-ALL) characterized by a gene expression profile similar to Ph-positive B-ALL but lacking the BCR-ABL1 translocation. The molecular pathogenesis of Ph-like B-ALL is heterogenous and involves aberrant genomics, receptor overexpression, kinase fusions, and mutations leading to kinase signaling activation, leukemogenic cellular proliferation, and differentiation blockade. Testing for the Ph-like signature, once only a research technique, is now available to the clinical oncologist. The plethora of data pointing to poor outcomes for this ALL subset has triggered investigations into the role of targeted therapies, predominantly involving tyrosine kinase inhibitors that are showing promising results.

Topics & Concepts

Cancer researchChromosomal translocationLymphoblastic LeukemiaTyrosine kinasebreakpoint cluster regionLeukemiaPathogenesisBiologyGeneMedicineSignal transductionImmunologyGeneticsAcute Lymphoblastic Leukemia researchChronic Myeloid Leukemia TreatmentsChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life