Activating mutations of class III receptor tyrosine kinases (RTK) FLT3, PDGFR and KIT are associated with multiple human neoplasms including hematologic malignancies, for example: systemic mast cell disorders (KIT), non-CML myeloproliferative neoplasms (PDGFR) and subsets of acute leukemias (FLT3 and KIT).
The FLT3 molecular marker is listed as a prognostic factor, an important leukaemogenic marker in acute leukemias, also the polymorphism (G1082A) of the IL10 interleukin can to present pleiotropic effects in many diseases and could is associated to development of ALL.
To determine a safe and biologically active dose of quizartinib (AC220), a potent and selective class III receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) FLT3 inhibitor, in combination with salvage chemotherapy in children with relapsed acute leukemia.
We previously generated a knock-in mouse, harboring an internal tandem duplication at the endogenous Flt3 locus, which develops a fatal myeloproliferative neoplasm (MPN), but fails to develop acute leukemia, suggesting additional mutations are necessary for transformation.
FLT3-mutated acute myeloid leukemia (AML), despite not being recognized as a distinct entity in the World Health Organization (WHO) classification system, is readily recognized as a particular challenge by clinical specialists who treat acute leukemia.
This report describes a 43-year-old patient with FLT3-internal tandem duplication (FLT3-ITD) positive acute myeloid leukemia who initially presented with leukocytosis and concern for acute leukemia.