Spontaneous improvement of hematologic abnormalities in patients having juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia with specific RAS mutations

Kazuyuki Matsuda(Shinshu University Hospital), Akira Shimada(Gunma Children's Medical Center), Nao Yoshida(Nagoya University), Atsushi Ogawa(Niigata Cancer Center Hospital), Akihiro Watanabe(Niigata Cancer Center Hospital), Shuhei Yajima(Hamamatsu Medical Center), Susumu Iizuka, Kazutoshi Koike(Shinshu University), Fumio Yanai(Fukuoka University), Keiichiro Kawasaki(Kobe Children's Hospital), Masakatsu Yanagimachi(Yokohama City University), Akira Kikuchi(Saitama Children's Medical Center), Yoshitoshi Ohtsuka(Hyogo Medical University), Eiko Hidaka(Shinshu University Hospital), Kazuyoshi Yamauchi(Shinshu University Hospital), Miyuki Tanaka(Shinshu University), Ryu Yanagisawa(Shinshu University), Yozo Nakazawa(Shinshu University), Masaaki Shiohara(Shinshu University), Atsushi Manabe(St. Luke's International Hospital), Seiji Kojima(Nagoya University), Kenichi Koike(Shinshu University)
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Abstract

Of 11 children with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML) carrying RAS mutations (8 with NRAS mutations, 3 with KRAS2 mutations), 5 had a profound elevation in either or both the white blood cells and spleen size at diagnosis. Three patients had no or modest hepatosplenomegaly and mild leukocytosis at presentation but subsequently showed a marked increase in spleen size with or without hematologic exacerbation, for which nonintensive chemotherapy was initiated. The other three patients with NRAS or KRAS2 glycine to serine substitution received no chemotherapy, but hematologic improvement has been observed during a 2- to 4-year follow up. In the third group, all hematopoietic cell lineages analyzed had the RAS mutations at the time of hematologic improvement, whereas DNA obtained from the nails had the wild type. Additionally, numbers of circulating granulocyte-macrophage progenitors were significantly reduced during the clinical course. Thus, some patients with JMML with specific RAS mutations may have spontaneously improving disease.


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