Lenalidomide-associated B-cell ALL: Clinical and pathologic correlates and sensitivity to lenalidomide withdrawal Journal Article


Authors: Geyer, M. B.; Shaffer, B. C.; Bhatnagar, B.; Mims, A. S.; Klein, V.; Dilip, D.; Glass, J. L.; Lozanski, G.; Hassoun, H.; Landau, H.; Zhang, Y.; Xiao, W.; Roshal, M.; Park, J. H.
Article Title: Lenalidomide-associated B-cell ALL: Clinical and pathologic correlates and sensitivity to lenalidomide withdrawal
Abstract: Lenalidomide is an effective component of induction and maintenance therapy for multiple myeloma, though with a risk of secondary malignancies, including acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). In contrast to therapy-related myeloid neoplasia, lenalidomide-associated lymphoblastic neoplasia remains poorly characterized. We conducted a dual institution retrospective study of 32 ALL cases that arose after lenalidomide maintenance (all B-lineage, 31/32 BCR::ABL-negative). B-cell ALL (B-ALL) was diagnosed at median 54 months (range, 5-119) after first exposure to lenalidomide and after median 42 months of cumulative lenalidomide exposure (range, 2-114). High incidence of TP53 mutations (9/19 evaluable cases) and low hypodiploidy (8/26 patients) were identified. Despite median age of 65 years and poor-risk B-ALL features observed in the cohort, rates of complete response (CR) or CR with incomplete hematologic recovery were high (25/28 patients receiving treatment). Median event-free survival was 35.4 months among treated patients (not reached among those undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation [HCT]). Sixteen patients remain alive without evidence of B-ALL after HCT or extended maintenance therapy. We also describe regression of B-ALL or immature B-cell populations with B-ALL immunophenotype after lenalidomide discontinuation in 5 patients, suggesting lenalidomide may drive leukemic progression even after initiation of lymphoblastic neoplasia and that lenalidomide withdrawal alone may be an appropriate first-line intervention in selected patients. Monitoring for early B-ALL-like proliferations may offer opportunities for lenalidomide withdrawal to prevent progression. Established combination chemotherapy regimens, newer surface antigen-targeted approaches, and allogeneic HCT are effective in many patients with lenalidomide-associated B-ALL and should be offered to medically fit patients.
Keywords: chemotherapy; therapy; mutations; adults; features; acute lymphoblastic-leukemia; multiple-myeloma; cancer
Journal Title: Blood Advances
Volume: 7
Issue: 13
ISSN: 2473-9529
Publisher: American Society of Hematology  
Date Published: 2023-07-11
Start Page: 3087
End Page: 3098
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:001039303700001
DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2022009212
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC10362546
PUBMED: 36827680
Notes: The MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) is acknowledged in the PDF -- Corresponding author is MSK author: Mark B. Geyer -- Source: Wos
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MSK Authors
  1. Jae Hong Park
    356 Park
  2. Hani Hassoun
    329 Hassoun
  3. Heather Jolie Landau
    419 Landau
  4. Mikhail Roshal
    227 Roshal
  5. Jacob Lowell Glass
    56 Glass
  6. Mark Blaine Geyer
    83 Geyer
  7. Brian Carl Shaffer
    164 Shaffer
  8. Yanming Zhang
    199 Zhang
  9. Wenbin Xiao
    108 Xiao
  10. Deepika Dilip
    13 Dilip