Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2138058 | Leukemia Research | 2011 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
We examined the predictive impact of HIF-1α protein expression on clinical outcome of 84 normal karyotype acute myeloid leukemia (NK-AML) patients (median age 66.5 years) at our institute. Thirty percent of NK-AML cells expressed cytoplasmic HIF-1α. In univariate analysis, low HIF-1α (≤5%, n = 66) was associated with improved event-free survival (p = 0.0453, HR = 0.22). Multivariate analysis incorporating age, complete remission, FLT3-ITD mutation, and marrow blast percentage demonstrated that HIF-1α was independently associated with poorer overall and event-free survival. HIF-1α expression correlated with VEGF-C but not VEGF-A, marrow angiogenesis, FLT3 ITD or NPM1 mutations. These results support HIF-1α as an outcome marker for NK-AML.
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Authors
George Deeb, Mary M. Vaughan, Ian McInnis, Laurie Ann Ford, Sheila N.J. Sait, Petr Starostik, Meir Wetzler, Terry Mashtare, Eunice S. Wang,