NEWS: Eli Warriors Dr. Druley shines a ray of Light on Infant - TopicsExpress



          

NEWS: Eli Warriors Dr. Druley shines a ray of Light on Infant Leukemia Todd Druley, MD, PhD, from Washington University in St. Louis, recently discovered that babies who develop leukemia during their first year of life appear to have inherited a genetic predisposition from both parents that can make them highly susceptible to the disease. Unlike leukemia in older children, which can often be cured, infant leukemia is very rare and more difficult to cure. Dr. Druleys research that is now exploring a way to possibly replace the harmful gene from the infants DNA with a healthy version of the same gene and, ultimately, prevent a leukemia diagnosis. The Eli Seth Matthews Leukemia Foundation is acknowledged in this finding. Project Title: Identifying Rare Genetic Variants Involved in High Risk Pediatric Leukemia Via Pooled Type of Childhood Cancer: Leukemia, Leukemia - ALL.Project Overview Precursor-B acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common form of childhood cancer. Despite improved treatment, hundreds still die annually and survivors often suffer long-term complications. Eighty percent of patients have large genetic alterations, yet these changes are not thought to cause ALL, and the remaining 20% have no identifiable genetic variation. Therefore, despite much research, the genetic cause as to why so many children develop ALL remains unknown. I believe that individual combinations of rare, inherited mutations predispose to developing ALL and modify response to therapy. We have recently published a powerful new DNA sequencing method that will comprehensively survey multiple genes in a rapid and cost-effective manner. In collaboration with the Childrens Oncology Group (COG), I will use this method to sequence 56 genes involved in ALL development in the non-cancerous DNA from 96 children with high-risk ALL and 96 random children. These results will then be validated in a second cohort of 250 children with high-risk ALL. Once the genetic changes are identified, I will study the functional impact of these mutations as well as review the treatment course of each patient to identify individual combinations of genetic variants that may have impacted ALL development or treatment. The COG can incorporate this cost-effective method into the next prospective ALL biology study. Understanding how rare variations impact ALL development and treatment will allow for better individual risk stratification and customized treatment which will minimize long-term complications and maximize the chance of a cure. Project Update Dr. Druley recently discovered through his research that babies who develop leukemia during their first year of life appear to have inherited a genetic predisposition that can make them highly susceptible to the disease. Unlike leukemia in older children, which can often be cured, infant leukemia is very rare and more difficult to cure. Doctors have been baffled why babies that are just a few months old can develop cancer since they have not lived long enough to accumulate a critical number of cancer-causing mutations. Dr. Druley’s research has shed a bit of light on this question. His findings indicate that babies appear to have inherited rare genetic variants from both parents that by themselves would not cause problems, but in combination put the infants at high risk of leukemia. Dr. Druley wants to continue to study these inherited variations and learn more about how they can lead to leukemia. The hope is that it may be possible to use a technique called genetic editing to remove the harmful gene from the DNA of infants who are susceptible to leukemia, and replace it with a healthy version of the same gene, ultimately sparing babies and their families from a devastating diagnosis. Dr. Druleys project was recently published in the journal Leukemia.
Posted on: Fri, 28 Mar 2014 19:22:03 +0000

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