Review of a case of Down syndrome T-ALL with complex karyotype and treatment response
This publication is a narrative review and case report describing a single 7-year-old boy with Down syndrome and T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The review's scope is to characterize this rare clinical entity and discuss treatment.
The authors report that the patient's leukemia had a complex karyotype with translocation t(1;14)(p32;q11) and deletion of chromosome 9p. RNA sequencing was negative for a fusion transcript, and pathogenic variants were found in NOTCH1 and FBXW7. The patient received chemotherapy according to the AIEOP-BFM ALL 2017 study protocol and achieved a favorable response with minimal residual disease negativity after 15 months of follow-up.
The authors note multiple severe complications and significant treatment modifications due to toxicity. They acknowledge key limitations, stating that this entity remains poorly characterized both genetically and clinically, and there are no standardized guidelines for treating these rare and fragile patients.
The practice relevance is that improved knowledge and characterization of Down syndrome T-ALL might inform clinicians about treatment decision making for this very rare disease. The authors suggest the findings indicate a sporadic leukemogenesis origin, distinct from the pathway associated with B-cell precursor ALL.