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Träfflista för sökning "hsv:(MEDICIN OCH HÄLSOVETENSKAP) hsv:(Klinisk medicin) hsv:(Pediatrik) ;pers:(Jahnukainen Kirsi)"

Search: hsv:(MEDICIN OCH HÄLSOVETENSKAP) hsv:(Klinisk medicin) hsv:(Pediatrik) > Jahnukainen Kirsi

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  • Juul-Dam, KL, et al. (author)
  • Patient-Tailored Deep Sequencing of Peripheral Blood Enables Early Detection of Relapse in Childhood Acute Myeloid Leukemia
  • 2019
  • In: Blood Vpl 134 Suppl 1 1456. - : American Society of Hematology. - 0006-4971 .- 1528-0020.
  • Conference paper (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Relapse remains a major therapeutic challenge in children with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Outcome after relapse may improve if preemptive therapy is initiated at first evidence of leukemia regrowth. Early detection of imminent relapse requires molecular measurable residual disease (MRD) monitoring after therapy completion. Today, this is possible only in about 40% of children with AML that harbor genetic abnormalities applicable for quantification using standardized qPCR assays. To enable disease surveillance for all patients, we developed patient-tailored deep sequencing (DS) MRD analysis, which provides highly sensitive detection of leukemia-specific mutations. We investigated the potential of this method for early relapse detection in peripheral blood (PB), the only easily accessible source for MRD sampling in children. PB samples were collected at monthly intervals during follow-up from 45 children diagnosed with AML and treated according to The Nordic Society of Pediatric Haematology and Oncology (NOPHO)-DBH AML 2012 protocol between January 2013 and May 2016 in Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland (508 samples, median 11 samples/patient, range 3-27). Nine patients with relapse (median age 5 years, range 0-8) had available diagnostic and relapse material and were included in this study. The patients displayed core binding factor abnormalities (n=3), KMT2A-rearrangements (n=3), monosomy 7 (n=1) or normal karyotype (n=2) at AML diagnosis. Leukemia-specific single nucleotide variants (SNVs) were identified with exome sequencing (ES) of sorted leukemic cells with lymphocytes or remission PB as constitutive DNA template. A variant allele frequency (VAF) with 95% confidence interval including 50% indicates presence of the mutation in all leukemic cells at diagnosis. With the exception of 2 cases with only subclonal mutations at diagnosis, leukemia-specific SNVs with VAF of 50% at diagnosis and persistence at relapse were selected as MRD targets. MRD target mutations were quantified in PB samples preceding overt relapse using patient-tailored DS assays with sensitivity of VAF 0.02%. In diagnostic samples, ES identified 53 leukemia-specific SNVs (median 4 SNVs/patient, range 2-12) of which 33 were also present at relapse (median 2 SNVs/patient, range 1-9). The number of mutations identified at diagnosis increased with age (Rs 0.83, p=0.006). All patients had at least one leukemia-specific SNV detected at both diagnosis and relapse. Twenty-one MRD target mutations (median 2 SNVs/patient, range 1-3) were quantified in PB (55 samples, median sampling interval 28 days, range 11-80) using DS. In 8/9 patients, at least one SNV was detected in PB before overt relapse occurred. The first PB sample showing MRD positivity (median VAF 0.14%, range 0.03-0.44) preceded hematological relapse at a median interval of 3 months (range 0-7.9). In 6 patients not preemptively treated, the median doubling time based on VAF increments was 7 days, with great variability between individuals and genotypes (range 4-28 days). Three patients had molecular relapse diagnosed by qPCR used in clinical diagnostics and received individualized preemptive treatment. In these 3 patients, DS detected mutations in PB for >100 days preceding overt relapse and the doubling times were 14, 25 and 36 days. In conclusion, DS of leukemia-specific mutations at frequent intervals in PB enables early detection of relapse and ES at diagnosis may identify SNVs applicable for such longitudinal MRD monitoring. This approach facilitates molecular disease surveillance and initiation of preemptive therapy in AML patients without established qPCR targets.
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  • Bager, Ninna, et al. (author)
  • Complex and monosomal karyotype are distinct cytogenetic entities with an adverse prognostic impact in paediatric acute myeloid leukaemia : A NOPHO-DBH-AML study
  • 2018
  • In: British Journal of Haematology. - : Wiley. - 0007-1048 .- 1365-2141. ; 183:4, s. 618-628
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Data on occurrence, genetic characteristics and prognostic impact of complex and monosomal karyotype (CK/MK) in children with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) are scarce. We studied CK and MK in a large unselected cohort of childhood AML patients diagnosed and treated according to Nordic Society for Paediatric Haematology and Oncology (NOPHO)-AML protocols 1993-2015. In total, 800 patients with de novo AML were included. CK was found in 122 (15%) and MK in 41 (5%) patients. CK and MK patients were young (median age 2.1 and 3.3 years, respectively) and frequently had FAB M7 morphology (24% and 22%, respectively). Refractory disease was more common in MK patients (15% vs. 4%) and stem cell transplantation in first complete remission was more frequent (32% vs. 19%) compared with non-CK/non-MK patients. CK showed no association with refractory disease but was an independent predictor of an inferior event-free survival (EFS; hazard ratio [HR] 1.43, P = 0.03) and overall survival (OS; HR 1.48, P = 0.01). MK was associated with a poor EFS (HR 1.57, P = 0.03) but did not show an inferior OS compared to non-MK patients (HR 1.14, P = 0.62). In a large paediatric cohort, we characterized AML with non-recurrent abnormal karyotype and unravelled the adverse impact of CK and MK on prognosis.
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  • Wennström, Lovisa, et al. (author)
  • Acute Myeloid Leukemia in Adolescents and Young Adults Treated in Pediatric and Adult Departments in the Nordic Countries
  • 2016
  • In: Pediatric Blood & Cancer. - : Wiley-Blackwell. - 1545-5009 .- 1545-5017. ; 63:1, s. 83-92
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background: Studies on adolescents and young adults with acute lymphoblastic leukemia suggest better results when using pediatric protocols for adult patients, while corresponding data for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) are limited. Procedure: We investigated disease characteristics and outcome for de novo AML patients 10-30 years old treated in pediatric or adult departments. We included 166 patients 10-18 years of age with AML treated according to the pediatric NOPHO-protocols (1993-2009) compared with 253 patients aged 15-30 years treated in hematology departments (1996-2009) in the Nordic countries. Results: The incidence of AML was 4.9/million/year for the age group 10-14 years, 6.5 for 15-18 years, and 6.9 for 19-30 years. Acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) was more frequent in adults and in females of all ages. Pediatric patients with APL had similar overall survival as pediatric patients without APL. Overall survival at 5 years was 60% (52-68%) for pediatric patients compared to 65% (58-70%) for adult patients. Cytogenetics and presenting white blood cell count were the only independent prognostic factors for overall survival. Age was not an independent prognostic factor. Conclusions: No difference was found in outcome for AML patients age 10-30 years treated according to pediatric as compared to adult protocols.
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  • Result 1-10 of 35
Type of publication
journal article (21)
conference paper (14)
Type of content
peer-reviewed (25)
other academic/artistic (10)
Author/Editor
Hasle, Henrik (32)
Abrahamsson, Jonas, ... (24)
Zeller, Bernward (23)
Lausen, Birgitte (21)
Forestier, Erik (16)
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Jonsson, Olafur G. (14)
Palle, Josefine (14)
Heldrup, Jesper (10)
Ha, Shau-Yin (9)
Abrahamsson, Jonas (7)
Kjeldsen, Eigil (7)
Noren-Nyström, Ulrik ... (6)
Palle, Josefine, 196 ... (5)
De Moerloose, Barbar ... (4)
Winiarski, Jacek (4)
Fogelstrand, Linda, ... (4)
Saks, Kadri (4)
Juul-Dam, KL (4)
Glosli, Heidi (4)
Gustafsson, Göran (3)
Hovi, Liisa (3)
Palmqvist, Lars, 196 ... (3)
Hovland, Randi (3)
Staffas, Anna, 1982 (3)
Reinhardt, Dirk (3)
Tierens, Anne (3)
Ommen, HB (3)
Sandahl, Julie Damga ... (3)
Harila-Saari, Arja (2)
Kristiansson, Erik, ... (2)
Jonmundsson, Gudmund ... (2)
Clausen, Niels (2)
Jonsson, OG (2)
Rosenquist, Richard (2)
Kanduri, Meena, 1974 (2)
Ehrencrona, Hans (2)
Kovalova, Zhanna (2)
Rehammar, Anna, 1978 (2)
Bager, Ninna (2)
Sandahl, Julie D. (2)
Sandahl, JD (2)
Locatelli, Franco (2)
Leverger, Guy (2)
Delsing Malmberg, Er ... (2)
Aggerholm, A (2)
Ifversen, Marianne (2)
Dirdal, MM (2)
Juul-Dam, Kristian L ... (2)
Zeller, Bem (2)
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University
University of Gothenburg (24)
Umeå University (16)
Uppsala University (15)
Karolinska Institutet (9)
Lund University (7)
Linköping University (1)
Language
English (35)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Medical and Health Sciences (35)

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