MicroRNA expression at diagnosis adds relevant prognostic information to molecular categorization in patients with intermediate-risk cytogenetic acute myeloid leukemia

M. Díaz-Beyá, S. Brunet, J. Nomdedéu, R. Tejero, T. Díaz, M. Pratcorona, M. Tormo, J. M. Ribera, L. Escoda, R. Duarte, D. Gallardo, I. Heras, M. P. Queipo De Llano, J. Bargay, M. Monzo, J. Sierra, A. Navarro, J. Esteve

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60 Scopus citations

Abstract

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a heterogeneous disease, and optimal treatment varies according to cytogenetic risk factors and molecular markers. Several studies have demonstrated the prognostic importance of microRNAs (miRNAs) in AML. Here we report a potential association between miRNA expression and clinical outcome in 238 intermediate-risk cytogenetic AML (IR-AML) patients from 16 institutions in the CETLAM cooperative group. We first profiled 670 miRNAs in a subset of 85 IR-AML patients from a single institution and identified 10 outcome-related miRNAs. We then validated these 10 miRNAs by individual assays in the total cohort and confirmed the prognostic impact of 4 miRNAs. High levels of miR-196b and miR-644 were independently associated with shorter overall survival, and low levels of miR-135a and miR-409-3p with a higher risk of relapse. Interestingly, miR-135a and miR-409-3p maintained their independent prognostic value within the unfavorable molecular subcategory (wild-type NPM1 and CEBPA and/or FLT3-ITD), and miR-644 retained its value within the favorable molecular subcategory. miR-409-3p, miR-135a, miR-196b and mir-644 arose as prognostic markers for IR-AML, both overall and within specific molecular subgroups.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)804-812
Number of pages9
JournalLeukemia
Volume28
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2014
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • AML
  • miR-135a
  • miR-196b
  • miR-409-3p
  • miR-644
  • miRNA

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