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Article Abstract

Chromoanagenesis (CAG) encompasses a spectrum of catastrophic genomic events, including chromothripsis, chromoanasynthesis, and chromoplexy. We studied CAG in 410 patients with a diagnosis of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), 292 newly diagnosed (ND), and 118 refractory/relapsed, using optical genome mapping. CAG was identified by the presence of clusters (with 10 or more breakpoints) of structural abnormalities and/or segmental copy number alterations within one or more chromosomal regions. CAG was detected in 65 (16%) patients. Compared with patients without CAG, those with CAG showed significantly (p < 0.0001) higher frequencies of highly complex karyotype (92% vs. 11%), monosomal karyotype (88% vs. 12%), extensive clonal heterogeneity (75% vs. 7%), gene amplification (49% vs. 1%), and TP53 deletion/mutation (92% vs. 9%). Overall, CAG was detected in about two-thirds of AML patients who exhibited the abovementioned high-risk cytogenetic abnormalities/karyotype. Among the 42 patients with ND AML and CAG, 36 received treatments and follow-ups, and 28 (78%) had no or only partial response to therapy. Among patients with ND AML, those with CAG had a shorter overall survival than those without CAG (median survival: 5 vs. 14 months, p < 0.0001). However, in multivariate analysis, CAG did not appear to be an independent risk factor for survival. These results indicate that CAG is frequently associated with high-risk chromosomal alterations and genomic instability in AML and may contribute to treatment refractoriness and inferior survival in this subset of AML patients.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajh.27575DOI Listing

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