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Spontaneous Remission Of Juvenilemyelomonocytic Leukemia With Nras Mutation

Alsultan et al., 2012Leukemia

Alsultan, A., Khalifah, M., & Alrabiaah, A. A. (2012). spontaneous remission of juvenilemyelomonocytic leukemia with NRAS mutation. Pediatric hematology and oncology, 29(7), 624–626. https://doi.org/10.3109/08880018.2012.710299

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Abstract

Juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML) is a unique, aggressive hematopoietic disorder of infancy/early childhood caused by excessive proliferation of cells of monocytic and granulocytic lineages. Approximately 90% of patients carry either somatic or germline mutations of PTPN-11, K-RAS, N-RAS, CBL, or NF1 in their leukemic cells. These genetic aberrations are largely mutually exclusive and activate the Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway. Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) remains the therapy of choice for most patients with JMML, curing more than 50% of affected children. We recommend that this option be promptly offered to any child with PTPN-11-, K-RAS-, or NF1-mutated JMML and to the majority of those with N-RAS mutations. Because children with CBL mutations and few of those with N-RAS mutations may have spontaneous resolution of hematologic abnormalities, the decision to proceed to transplantation in these patients must be weighed carefully. Disease recurrence remains the main cause of treatment failure after HSCT. A second allograft is recommended if overt JMML relapse occurs after transplantation. Recently, azacytidine, a hypomethylating agent, was reported to induce hematologic/molecular remissions in some children with JMML, and its role in both reducing leukemia burden before HSCT and in nontransplant settings requires further studies.

Case Details

Disease Location

Blood

Personal Characteristics

29 months male

Clinical Characteristics

Patient originally presented a 1-month-old because of fever and hepatosplenomegaly initial cbc showed wbc 67,430/ul, an absolute monocyte count of 10,790/ul, platelet count of 142,000/ul with 4% blasts marrow morphology showed 100% cellularity with 12% blasts fetal hemoglobin was 22% at 2 months and 1% at 11 month jmml molecular testing was performed, the patient was found to hae a heterozygous nras mutation at codon 12 of exon 1, causing amino acid change from glycine to serine patient met criteria of jmml diagnosis

Remission Characteristics

Child continue to improve clinically with a marked reduction in the sizes of the spleen and liver and a decrease in the wbc and amc counts most recent cbc showed wbc 12,900/ul, 1500 amcs/ul, platelet count of 446,000/ul, hb of 11.2g/dl sr with no treatment over a follow-up duration of more than 2 years

Treatment & Mechanisms

Proposed Remission Mechanisms

No major mechanism proposed mentioned that this reports supporights matsuda et al.'s report on sr in infants with jmml

Clinical Treatment

None reported

Non-Clinical Treatment

None reported