We studied a stratified cohort of 51 childhood B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemias (B-ALLs) to evaluate the efficiency of spectral karyotyping (SKY) in the detection of chromosome aberrations previously diagnosed using chromosome banding and/or reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. Despite the small number of cases analyzed, several important features emerge from the study: (a) The result of banding analysis was revised in two-thirds of the cases. Eighty-three chromosome anomalies previously undetected or not characterized using chromosome banding were identified by spectral karyotyping, even in patients with apparently normal karyotypes. (b) All hyperdiploidy cases showed one or more extra copies of chromosomes X, 14, and 21. (c) Two hidden rearrangements, a t(7;12)(?p12;p13), and a new translocation, a t(9;12)(q31;p13), both involving the TEL gene, were characterized. (d) Some cryptic rearrangements, such as the der(21) t(12;21) translocation, remained undetected. (e) No new recurrent chromosome anomalies were discovered with this technique. In conclusion, the present study confirms the efficiency of the SKY technique in resolving and characterizing many complex chromosome anomalies seen in childhood B-ALLs, but it raises questions about the ability of this technique to detect cryptic rearrangements, such as the t(12;21) translocation.
The rapid detection of chromosome band 8q24 rearrangements, including classical translocations involving MYC and variant 3' translocations, is important for the accurate diagnosis and appropriate treatment of lymphoid malignancies. We have identified and characterized a CEPH YAC, 934e1, which extends from at least 190 kbp upstream to over 280 kbp downstream to MYC, allowing detection of classical t(8; 14)(q24;q32) and variant t(8;22)(q24;q11) and t(8;14)(q24;q11), extending distal to PVT1 and therefore, by extrapolation, to BVR1. This YAC also allowed clarification of complex chromosome 8 abnormalities and the identification of translocations in interphase nuclei. A second CEPH YAC, 904c3, previously shown to contain the PVT1 locus but not MYC, allowed distinction between translocations occurring centromeric and telomeric to MYC. Use of the 934e1 YAC will aid classification of a variety of lymphoid proliferations and further characterization of rearranged cases with the 904c3 YAC will simplify mapping of their diverse breakpoints.
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