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How I (diagnose and) treat myeloid / lymphoid neoplasms with tyrosine kinase gene fusions

How I (diagnose and) treat myeloid / lymphoid neoplasms with tyrosine kinase gene fusions
How I (diagnose and) treat myeloid / lymphoid neoplasms with tyrosine kinase gene fusions

The fifth edition of the World Health Organization (WHO) classification and the International Consensus Classification (ICC) both include a category "myeloid/lymphoid neoplasms (MLN) with eosinophilia (eo) and tyrosine kinase (TK) gene fusions” (WHO, MLN-TK; ICC, M/LN-eo-TK). This rare group comprises phenotypically and prognostically heterogeneous disorders, which present a significant diagnostic challenge. The rapid and reliable identification of patients with MLN-TK may be delayed due to genetic complexity and significant phenotypic differences, including the chronic phase and primary/secondary blast phase (BP) of myeloid, lymphoid, or mixed phenotype in the bone marrow (BP-BM) and/or at extramedullary sites (extramedullary disease [EMD]). As a result, the entire armamentarium of conventional molecular genetic and cytogenetic techniques complemented by modern sequencing technologies, such as RNA sequencing or whole-genome sequencing, are often required to identify an underlying TK fusion. TK inhibitors (TKIs) with variable efficacy are available for all fusion genes, but a long-term favorable clinical course under TKI monotherapy is currently only observed in MLN-PDGFRA/PDGFRB fusion genes on imatinib. Because primary/secondary BP-BM/EMD occurs more frequently in MLN-FGFR1/JAK2/FLT3/ETV6::ABL1, a sequential combination of selective TKIs with or without prior intensive chemotherapy, rarely local radiotherapy, and/or subsequent allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation should be considered.

Myeloid neoplasm, TK fusion gene, TK inhibitor, eosinophilia, lymphoid neoplasm
0006-4971
Reiter, Andreas
ffa23e84-4a13-4cb5-aaf0-3fafe25dbede
Metzgeroth, Georgia
611ec46d-9a11-4e24-ae0f-5ac19dfd0237
Cross, Nicholas C.P.
f87650da-b908-4a34-b31b-d62c5f186fe4
Reiter, Andreas
ffa23e84-4a13-4cb5-aaf0-3fafe25dbede
Metzgeroth, Georgia
611ec46d-9a11-4e24-ae0f-5ac19dfd0237
Cross, Nicholas C.P.
f87650da-b908-4a34-b31b-d62c5f186fe4

Reiter, Andreas, Metzgeroth, Georgia and Cross, Nicholas C.P. (2024) How I (diagnose and) treat myeloid / lymphoid neoplasms with tyrosine kinase gene fusions. Blood. (doi:10.1182/blood.2023022417).

Record type: Review

Abstract

The fifth edition of the World Health Organization (WHO) classification and the International Consensus Classification (ICC) both include a category "myeloid/lymphoid neoplasms (MLN) with eosinophilia (eo) and tyrosine kinase (TK) gene fusions” (WHO, MLN-TK; ICC, M/LN-eo-TK). This rare group comprises phenotypically and prognostically heterogeneous disorders, which present a significant diagnostic challenge. The rapid and reliable identification of patients with MLN-TK may be delayed due to genetic complexity and significant phenotypic differences, including the chronic phase and primary/secondary blast phase (BP) of myeloid, lymphoid, or mixed phenotype in the bone marrow (BP-BM) and/or at extramedullary sites (extramedullary disease [EMD]). As a result, the entire armamentarium of conventional molecular genetic and cytogenetic techniques complemented by modern sequencing technologies, such as RNA sequencing or whole-genome sequencing, are often required to identify an underlying TK fusion. TK inhibitors (TKIs) with variable efficacy are available for all fusion genes, but a long-term favorable clinical course under TKI monotherapy is currently only observed in MLN-PDGFRA/PDGFRB fusion genes on imatinib. Because primary/secondary BP-BM/EMD occurs more frequently in MLN-FGFR1/JAK2/FLT3/ETV6::ABL1, a sequential combination of selective TKIs with or without prior intensive chemotherapy, rarely local radiotherapy, and/or subsequent allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation should be considered.

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Accepted/In Press date: 14 July 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 July 2024
Keywords: Myeloid neoplasm, TK fusion gene, TK inhibitor, eosinophilia, lymphoid neoplasm

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496120
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496120
ISSN: 0006-4971
PURE UUID: a86df5e9-270e-44ba-ba8f-d69dce045f82
ORCID for Nicholas C.P. Cross: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5481-2555

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Date deposited: 04 Dec 2024 17:45
Last modified: 05 Dec 2024 02:38

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Author: Andreas Reiter
Author: Georgia Metzgeroth

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