2019-01-18T11:41:29Z
2019-01-18T11:41:29Z
2015-10-02
2019-01-18T11:41:31Z
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a heterogeneous disease whose prognosis is mainly related to the biological risk conferred by cytogenetics and molecular profiling. In elderly patients (>= 60 years) with normal karyotype AML miR-3151 have been identified as a prognostic factor. However, miR-3151 prognostic value has not been examined in younger AML patients. In the present work, we have studied miR-3151 alone and in combination with BAALC, its host gene, in a cohort of 181 younger intermediate-risk AML (IR-AML) patients. Patients with higher expression of miR-3151 had shorter overall survival (P = 0.0025), shorter leukemia-free survival (P = 0.026) and higher cumulative incidence of relapse (P = 0.082). Moreover, in the multivariate analysis miR-3151 emerged as independent prognostic marker in both the overall series and within the unfavorable molecular prognostic category. Interestingly, the combined determination of both miR-3151 and BAALC improved this prognostic stratification, with patients with low levels of both parameters showing a better outcome compared with those patients harboring increased levels of one or both markers (P = 0.003). In addition, we studied the microRNA expression profile associated with miR-3151 identifying a six-microRNA signature. In conclusion, the analysis of miR-3151 and BAALC expression may well contribute to an improved prognostic stratification of younger patients with IR-AML.
Article
Published version
English
Leucèmia mieloide; Pronòstic mèdic; Malalts de càncer; Micro RNAs; Myeloid leukemia; Prognosis; Cancer patients; MicroRNAs
Springer Nature
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1038/bcj.2015.76
Blood Cancer Journal, 2015, vol. 5, p. e352
https://doi.org/10.1038/bcj.2015.76
cc-by (c) Diaz Beya, Marina et al., 2015
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es