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Clinical evolution and TEL/AML1 fusion in pediatric patients with Down syndrome and acute lymphoblastic leukemia

The increased risk of developing leukemia found in Down syndrome (DS) patients is already well-known. However, the contribution of the extra copy of chromosome 21 to this leukemogenesis is still not well established. The TEL/AML1 fusion is the most frequently found structural anomaly in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in childhood, but its association with ALL in DS patients is not very clear. We investigated a sample of four patients with ALL and DS (ALL-DS) in terms of their clinical evolution and cytogenetic aspects, including a study of the TEL/AML1 fusion. The ages of the patients ranged from 5 years and 7 months to 13 years and 7 months, the number of leukocytes in peripheral blood was 7,200 to 208,000 x 106 and the percentage of blasts in the bone marrow was 20 to 95%. Only one patient tested positive for the TEL/AML1 fusion. All patients achieved complete remission and none presented extramedullary involvement or relapse. The survival period ranged from 67 to 82 months and there was no death. In our series of children with ALL-DS, the cytogenetic aspects and the good clinical evolution observed are in agreement with the literature.

Leukemia; Down syndrome; TEL/AML1 fusion


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