Abstract
Simple SummaryAlthough childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (chALL) management is considered as one of the success stories in modern clinical oncology, the increased incidence of relapse in high-risk patients and the severe toxicity/long-term health effects due to chemotherapy intensity highlight the need for further improvements in patients’ risk stratification and personalized management. Synthetic glucocorticoids (GCs) are the core agents in chALL chemotherapy, exerting their role through the nuclear glucocorticoid receptor (GR), while GAS5 lncRNA suppresses the GCs-GR axis through binding to GR’s DNA binding domain. The objective of the study was the evaluation of GAS5 prognostic utility in chALL. GAS5 overexpression was strongly associated with a higher risk for short-term relapse and poor treatment outcome, independently of patients’ clinicopathological data. Moreover, “GAS5-including” multivariate models resulted in superior risk stratification and clinical benefit for disease prognosis, supporting precision medicine decisions in chALL.Glucocorticoids (GCs) remain the cornerstone of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (chALL) therapy, exerting their cytotoxic effects through binding and activating of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR). GAS5 lncRNA acts as a potent riborepressor of GR transcriptional activity, and thus targeting GAS5 in GC-treated chALL could provide further insights into GC resistance and support personalized treatment decisions. Herein, to study the clinical utility of GAS5 in chALL prognosis and chemotherapy response, GAS5 expression was quantified by RT-qPCR in bone marrow samples of chB-ALL patients at diagnosis (n = 164) and at end-of-induction (n = 109), treated with ALL-BFM protocol. Patients’ relapse and death were used as clinical end-points for survival analysis. Bootstrap analysis was performed for internal validation, and decision curve analysis assessed the clinical net benefit for chALL prognosis. Our findings demonstrated the elevated GAS5 levels in blasts of chALL patients compared to controls and the significantly higher risk for short-term relapse and poor treatment outcome of patients overexpressing GAS5, independently of their clinicopathological data. The unfavorable prognostic value of GAS5 overexpression was strongly validated in the high-risk/stem-cell transplantation subgroup. Finally, multivariate models incorporating GAS5 levels resulted in superior risk stratification and clinical benefit for chALL prognostication, supporting personalized prognosis and precision medicine decisions in chALL.
Highlights
Childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia is the most common type of cancer in children, accounting for ~26% of all childhood malignancies up to the age of 15 years worldwide [1,2]
Samples, specimens were excluded from the analysis due to samples, 6 specimens were excluded from the analysis due to
Considering the role of growth arrest-specific 5 (GAS5) Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) as a potent riborepressor of glucocorticoid receptor (GR) transcriptional activity, we have evaluated, for the first time, the prognostic value of GAS5 lncRNA
Summary
Childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (chALL) is the most common type of cancer in children, accounting for ~26% of all childhood malignancies up to the age of 15 years worldwide [1,2]. The current treatment of chALL relies on a multidrug chemotherapy regimen delivered in sequential phases (induction, consolidation, reinduction, and maintenance) over a period of 2 to 3 years [5,6,7]. Based on their strong anti-inflammatory and immune-suppressive functions, two synthetic glucocorticoids (GCs), prednisone/prednisolone and dexamethasone, have been widely used in the treatment of hematological malignancies [8,9,10]. GCs exert their cytotoxic effects through binding and activating the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), a ligand-dependent transcription factor of the family of nuclear steroid receptors
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