Abstract
The t(12;21) is the commonest recurrent translocation in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL), the presence of which has been suggested to be a good prognostic feature. We have studied 22 childhood cases of B-precursor ALL with this rearrangement, and have found no significant differences in event-free survival between these and a control group of patients with similar phenotypes. Using a variety of cytogenetic and molecular techniques, we have confirmed a strong association with co-expression of myeloid markers, frequent deletions of the short-arm of the untranslocated chromosome 12 homologue and duplication of the derivative chromosome 21. Intragenic deletion of the untranslocated ETV6 gene in 3/12 informative patients points to the likelihood of this gene being a target for deletion.
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Kempski, H., Chalker, J., Chessells, J., Sturt, N., Brickell, P., Webb, J., … Reeves, B. (1999). An investigation of the t(12;21) rearrangement in children with B- precursor acute lymphoblastic leukaemia using cytogenetic and molecular methods. British Journal of Haematology, 105(3), 684–689. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2141.1999.01425.x
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