Do random (non-clonal) chromosome abnormalities in bone marrow predict a clone to come? Southwestern Oncology Group of Leukemia Cytogenetics Subcommittee

Autor: T S, McConnell, M H, Duncan, K, Foucar
Rok vydání: 1991
Předmět:
Zdroj: Cancer genetics and cytogenetics. 53(2)
ISSN: 0165-4608
Popis: The biologic significance of clonal karyotypic abnormalities in human neoplasms is becoming better understood, but the significance of rare chromosomal aberrations is uncertain. Useful, yet arbitrary, cytogenetic definitions of a clone have been established and cases with a frequency of chromosome aberrations less than the accepted convention are explained by random loss, karyotypic instability/evolution, or other technical artifact. Are non-clonal chromosomal abnormalities that may predict future clinically significant clones being ignored? A brief case report is presented raising two such issues in the same myelodysplastic patient. This child had monosomy 7 and, later, trisomy 8, as well as increased numerical/structural aberrations seeming to predict relapse. Preliminary data from the Southwestern Oncology group is also presented. Non-clonal data should be included, when appropriate, in the clinical report.
Databáze: OpenAIRE