Impact of trisomy 8 (+8) on clinical presentation, treatment response, and survival in acute myeloid leukemia: A Southwest Oncology Group study

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Abstract

The prognostic impact of trisomy 8, alone or with other clonal aberrations, was evaluated in 849 patients with previously untreated acute myeloid leukemia (AML) who were registered to 5 Southwest Oncology Group trials. At presentation, 108 (12.7%) patients had +8 in their karyotypes, including 43 (5.1%) patients with +8 as the sole aberration; 307 (36.2%) were normal, and 434 (51.1%) had other cytogenetic abnormalities. Patients with +8 were slightly older (P = .033), had lower WBC (P = .011), and had lower percentages of peripheral blasts (P = .0004) than the patients without +8. Median survival time for all patients with +8 was 9.9 months (95% Cl, 6.5-12.5), similar to that of "unfavorable" cytogenetics risk groups (8.3 months; 95% Cl, 6.8-9.5.) Patients with +8 had significantly lower peripheral blasts (P = .0002), WBC (P < .0001) counts, and decreased overall survival (OS) than patients with normal cytogenetics (9.9 months vs 15.4 months; P = .006). However, survival of patients with +8 as the sole aberration did not differ significantly from those with normal cytogenetics (P = .36). Thus, the trisomy 8 group as a whole had poor survival, which was largely attributable to worsened outcomes among patients whose trisomy 8 was associated with other unfavorable cytogenetic abnormalities. © 2002 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Wolman, S. R., Gundacker, H., Appelbaum, F. R., & Slovak, M. L. (2002). Impact of trisomy 8 (+8) on clinical presentation, treatment response, and survival in acute myeloid leukemia: A Southwest Oncology Group study. Blood, 100(1), 29–35. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.V100.1.29

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