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GWAS Study

Methotrexate-related central neurotoxicity: clinical characteristics, risk factors and genome-wide association study in children treated for acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Mateos MK, Marshall GM, Barbaro PM et al.

33567813 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
585 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

MM
Mateos MK
MG
Marshall GM
BP
Barbaro PM
QM
Quinn MCJ
GC
George C
MC
Mayoh C
SR
Sutton R
RT
Revesz T
GJ
Giles JE
BD
Barbaric D
AF
Alvaro F
MF
Mechinaud F
CD
Catchpoole D
LJ
Lawson JA
CG
Chenevix-Trench G
MS
MacGregor S
KR
Kotecha RS
DL
Dalla-Pozza L
TT
Trahair TN
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Symptomatic methotrexate-related central neurotoxicity (MTX neurotoxicity) is a severe toxicity experienced during acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) therapy with potential long-term neurologic complications. Risk factors and long-term outcomes require further study. We conducted a systematic, retrospective review of 1,251 consecutive Australian children enrolled on Berlin-Frankfurt-Münster or Children's Oncology Group-based protocols between 1998-2013. Clinical risk predictors for MTX neurotoxicity were analyzed using regression. A genome-wide association study (GWAS) was performed on 48 cases and 537 controls. The incidence of MTX neurotoxicity was 7.6% (n=95 of 1,251), at a median of 4 months from ALL diagnosis and 8 days after intravenous or intrathecal MTX. Grade 3 elevation of serum aspartate aminotransferase (P=0.005, odds ratio 2.31 [range, 1.28-4.16]) in induction/consolidation was associated with MTX neurotoxicity, after accounting for the only established risk factor, age ≥10 years. Cumulative incidence of CNS relapse was increased in children where intrathecal MTX was omitted following symptomatic MTX neurotoxicity (n=48) compared to where intrathecal MTX was continued throughout therapy (n=1,174) (P=0.047). Five-year central nervous system relapse-free survival was 89.2 4.6% when intrathecal MTX was ceased compared to 95.4 0.6% when intrathecal MTX was continued. Recurrence of MTX neurotoxicity was low (12.9%) for patients whose intrathecal MTX was continued after their first episode. The GWAS identified single-nucletide polymorphism associated with MTX neurotoxicity near genes regulating neuronal growth, neuronal differentiation and cytoskeletal organization (P<1x10-6). In conclusion, increased serum aspartate aminotransferase and age ≥10 years at diagnosis were independent risk factors for MTX neurotoxicity. Our data do not support cessation of intrathecal MTX after a first MTX neurotoxicity event.

48 European ancestry cases, 537 European ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

585
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European
Ancestry
Australia
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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