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Non-random involvement of chromosome 13 in patients with persistent or relapsed disease after bone-marrow transplantation for chronic myeloid leukemia

✍ Scribed by Andrew Chase; Julie Pickard; Richard Szydlo; Stephanie Coulthard; John M. Goldman; Nicholas C.P. Cross


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
84 KB
Volume
27
Category
Article
ISSN
1045-2257

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✦ Synopsis


Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients with persistent or relapsed disease following bone-marrow transplantation (BMT) usually show both clonal and non-clonal cytogenetic changes in addition to the Philadelphia (Ph) translocation. These changes are presumably due to conditioning prior to transplantation and are generally not thought to be of clinical significance. We have examined the additional cytogenetic changes found in Phϩve cells after BMT in 47 CML patients. Forty patients showed clonal changes. The involvement of each chromosome was compared statistically with expected values assuming that further chromosome changes are random and related to chromosome size. In clones that comprised 50% or more of the Phϩve metaphases, chromosome 13 was involved in 12 of 22 clones (55%); this was highly significant when compared with the theoretical expected value of 3.2 (14.5%) (P Ͻ 0.001). The chromosome 13 rearrangements comprised both translocations and deletions. By means of FISH with a panel of 13q YAC clones, the breakpoints in 6 of these patients were investigated, but no common site of translocation was identified. The YAC panel was then used on material from 6 patients with chromosomal deletions. A common region of deletion was identified at 13q12-14, suggesting the presence of one or more tumor suppressor genes. We conclude that chromosome 13 deletions are non-randomly overrepresented in Phϩve metaphases following BMT for CML.