Robust genetic characterization of paediatric AML has demonstrated that fusion oncogenes are highly prevalent drivers of AML leukemogenesis in young children. Identification of fusion oncogenes associated with adverse outcomes has facilitated risk stratification of patients, although successful development of precision medicine approaches for most fusion-driven AML subtypes have been historically challenging. This knowledge gap has been in part due to difficulties in targeting structural alterations involving transcription factors and in identification of a therapeutic window for selective inhibition of the oncofusion without deleterious effects upon essential wild-type proteins. Herein, we discuss the current molecular landscape and functional characterisation of three of the most lethal childhood AML fusion-oncogene driven subtypes harbouring KMT2A, NUP98, or CBFA2T3::GLIS2 rearrangements. We further review early-phase clinical trial data of novel targeted inhibitors and immunotherapies that have demonstrated initial success specifically for children with these poor-prognosis genetic subtypes of AML and provide appreciable optimism to improve clinical outcomes in the future.
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Review Article|
January 14, 2025
Precision Medicine for High-Risk Gene Fusions in Paediatric AML: a focus on KMT2A, NUP98, and GLIS2 Rearrangements
Grace Egan,
Hospital for Sick Children & University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
* Corresponding Author; email: grace.egan@sickkids.ca
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Sarah K Tasian
Sarah K Tasian
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia & University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
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Blood blood.2024026598.
Article history
Submitted:
November 6, 2024
Revision Received:
December 23, 2024
Accepted:
December 30, 2024
Citation
Grace Egan, Sarah K Tasian; Precision Medicine for High-Risk Gene Fusions in Paediatric AML: a focus on KMT2A, NUP98, and GLIS2 Rearrangements. Blood 2025; blood.2024026598. doi: https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.2024026598
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