Defining 2 Biologically and Clinically Distinct Groups in Acute Leukemia with a Mixed Phenotype.

Journal: Blood
Published:
Abstract

A mixed phenotype is characteristic of de novo Mixed Phenotype Acute Leukemia (MPAL) but can also be seen in other leukemias. It poses substantial classification and management dilemmas. Herein, we report a large cohort of acute leukemia with a mixed phenotype and define Acute Myeloid Leukemia with Mixed Phenotype (AML-MP) and MPAL as two distinct groups by characterizing the clinical, genetic, and transcriptomic features. Clinically, patients with AML-MP and MPAL were both treated with either AML- or acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL)-directed induction regimens. AML-MP shows inferior responses (HR, 12.5; 95% CI, 2.72-57.8; p=.001), while MPAL shows better responses to ALL-directed treatment. Genetically, AML-MP harbors more frequent RUNX1 (23/52, 44%) and TP53 (12/52, 23.1%) mutations. In contrast, RUNX1 mutations are less frequent in MPAL (8/35, 23%, p=.01 vs AML-MP) and TP53 mutations as a driver are virtually absent in MPAL. Transcriptionally, AML-MP shows enrichment for stemness signatures, and a relative deficit of transcription factors critical for myeloid and lymphoid differentiation. Furthermore, AML-MP rarely switches to a lymphoid immunophenotype after treatment, in contrast to MPAL (1/40, 2.5%, vs. 10/28, 35.7%, p=.0003). Lastly, a genomic classification framework is proposed for future studies. Together, these data support the designation of AML-MP as a diagnosis distinct from MPAL and provide novel insights into the pathogenesis and therapies of acute leukemia with a mixed phenotype.

Authors
Pallavi Galera, Deepika Dilip, Andriy Derkach, Alexander Chan, Yanming Zhang, Sonali Persaud, Tanmay Mishra, Kyle Kramer, Mahak Kathpalia, Ying Liu, Christopher Famulare, Qi Gao, Douglas Mata, Maria Arcila, Mark Geyer, Eytan Stein, Ahmet Dogan, Mikhail Roshal, Ross Levine, Jacob Glass, Wenbin Xiao