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Genetic and Genomic Landscape of Secondary and Therapy-Related Acute Myeloid Leukemia

Alexandra Higgins, Mithun Vinod Shah

2020Genes51 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A subset of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) arises either from an antecedent myeloid malignancy (secondary AML, sAML) or as a complication of DNA-damaging therapy for other cancers (therapy-related myeloid neoplasm, t-MN). These secondary leukemias have unique biological and clinical features that distinguish them from de novo AML. Over the last decade, molecular techniques have unraveled the complex subclonal architecture of sAML and t-MN. In this review, we compare and contrast biological and clinical features of de novo AML with sAML and t-MN. We discuss the role of genetic mutations, including those involved in RNA splicing, epigenetic modification, tumor suppression, transcription regulation, and cell signaling, in the pathogenesis of secondary leukemia. We also discuss clonal hematopoiesis in otherwise healthy individuals, as well as in the context of another malignancy, and how it challenges the conventional notion of sAML/t-MN. We conclude by summarizing the current and emerging treatment strategies, including allogenic transplant, in these complex scenarios.

Topics & Concepts

Myeloid leukemiaBiologyContext (archaeology)EpigeneticsLeukemiaCancer researchMalignancyMyeloidRNA splicingGeneImmunologyGeneticsRNAPaleontologyAcute Myeloid Leukemia ResearchMyeloproliferative Neoplasms: Diagnosis and TreatmentRNA Research and Splicing
Genetic and Genomic Landscape of Secondary and Therapy-Related Acute Myeloid Leukemia | Litcius