Genetic Errors Linked to Aging Underlie Leukemia That Develops After Cancer Treatment

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Newswise For a small percentage of cancer patients, treatment aimed at curing the disease leads to a form of leukemia with a poor prognosis. Conventional thinking goes that chemotherapy and radiation therapy induce a barrage of damaging genetic mutations that kill cancer cells yet inadvertently spur the development of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), a blood cancer.

But a new study at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis challenges the view that cancer treatment in itself is a direct cause of what is known as therapy-related AML.

Rather, the research suggests, mutations in a well-known cancer gene, P53, can accumulate in blood stem cells as a person ages, years before a cancer diagnosis. If and when cancer develops, these mutated cells are more resistant to treatment and multiply at an accelerated pace after exposure to chemotherapy or radiation therapy, which then can lead to AML, the study indicates.

The teams findings, reported Dec. 8 in the journal Nature, open new avenues for research to predict which patients are at risk of developing therapy-related AML and to find ways to prevent it.

About 18,000 cases of AML are diagnosed in the United States each year, with about 2,000 triggered by previous exposure to chemotherapy or radiation therapy. Therapy-related AML is almost always fatal, even with aggressive treatment.

Until now, weve really understood very little about therapy-related AML and why it is so difficult to treat, said corresponding author Daniel Link, MD, a hematologist/oncologist at Siteman Cancer Center at Washington University and Barnes-Jewish Hospital. This gives us some important clues for further studies aimed at treatment and prevention.

The researchers initially sequenced the genomes of 22 cases of therapy-related AML, finding that those patients had similar numbers and types of genetic mutations in their leukemia cells as other patients who developed AML without exposure to chemotherapy or radiation therapy, an indication that cancer treatment does not cause widespread DNA damage.

This is contrary to what physicians and scientists have long accepted as fact, said senior author Richard K. Wilson, PhD, director of The Genome Institute at Washington University. It led us to consider a novel hypothesis: P53 mutations accumulate randomly as part of the aging process and are present in blood stem cells long before a patient is diagnosed with therapy-related AML.

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Genetic Errors Linked to Aging Underlie Leukemia That Develops After Cancer Treatment

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