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Dive into the research topics where Jan Starý is active.

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Featured researches published by Jan Starý.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Germline CBL mutations cause developmental abnormalities and predispose to juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia

Charlotte M. Niemeyer; Michelle Kang; Danielle H. Shin; Ingrid Furlan; Miriam Erlacher; Nancy Bunin; Severa Bunda; Jerry Z. Finklestein; Kathleen M. Sakamoto; Thomas A. Gorr; Parinda A. Mehta; Irene Schmid; Gabriele Kropshofer; Selim Corbacioglu; Peter Lang; Christoph Klein; Paul-Gerhard Schlegel; Andrea Heinzmann; Michaela Schneider; Jan Starý; Marry M. van den Heuvel-Eibrink; Henrik Hasle; Franco Locatelli; Debbie Sakai; Sophie Archambeault; Leslie Chen; Ryan C. Russell; Stephanie S Sybingco; Michael Ohh; Benjamin S. Braun

CBL encodes a member of the Cbl family of proteins, which functions as an E3 ubiquitin ligase. We describe a dominant developmental disorder resulting from germline missense CBL mutations, which is characterized by impaired growth, developmental delay, cryptorchidism and a predisposition to juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML). Some individuals experienced spontaneous regression of their JMML but developed vasculitis later in life. Importantly, JMML specimens from affected children show loss of the normal CBL allele through acquired isodisomy. Consistent with these genetic data, the common p.371Y>H altered Cbl protein induces cytokine-independent growth and constitutive phosphorylation of ERK, AKT and S6 only in hematopoietic cells in which normal Cbl expression is reduced by RNA interference. We conclude that germline CBL mutations have developmental, tumorigenic and functional consequences that resemble disorders that are caused by hyperactive Ras/Raf/MEK/ERK signaling and include neurofibromatosis type 1, Noonan syndrome, Costello syndrome, cardiofaciocutaneous syndrome and Legius syndrome.


Blood | 2009

Mutations in CBL occur frequently in juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia

Mignon L. Loh; Debbie Sakai; Christian Flotho; Michelle Kang; Manfred Fliegauf; Sophie Archambeault; Charles G. Mullighan; Leslie Chen; Eva Bergstraesser; Carlos E. Bueso-Ramos; Peter D. Emanuel; Henrik Hasle; Jean-Pierre J. Issa; Marry M. van den Heuvel-Eibrink; Franco Locatelli; Jan Starý; Monica Trebo; Marcin W. Wlodarski; Marco Zecca; Kevin Shannon; Charlotte M. Niemeyer

Juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia is an aggressive myeloproliferative disorder characterized by malignant transformation in the hematopoietic stem cell compartment with proliferation of differentiated progeny. Seventy-five percent of patients harbor mutations in the NF1, NRAS, KRAS, or PTPN11 genes, which encode components of Ras signaling networks. Using single nucleotide polymorphism arrays, we identified a region of 11q isodisomy that contains the CBL gene in several JMML samples, and subsequently identified CBL mutations in 27 of 159 JMML samples. Thirteen of these mutations alter codon Y371. In this report, we also demonstrate that CBL and RAS/PTPN11 mutations were mutually exclusive in these patients. Moreover, the exclusivity of CBL mutations with respect to other Ras pathway-associated mutations indicates that CBL may have a role in deregulating this key pathway in JMML.


Leukemia | 1999

Myelodysplastic syndrome, juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia, and acute myeloid leukemia associated with complete or partial monosomy 7

Henrik Hasle; Maurizio Aricò; Giuseppe Basso; Andrea Biondi; A Cantù Rajnoldi; Ursula Creutzig; Susanna Fenu; Christa Fonatsch; Oskar A. Haas; Jochen Harbott; Gabriela Kardos; Gitte Kerndrup; Georg Mann; C. Niemeyer; H Ptoszkova; J. Ritter; Rosalyn Slater; Jan Starý; B. Stollmann-Gibbels; Am Testi; Er van Wering; Martin Zimmermann

We reviewed the clinical features, treatment, and outcome of 100 children with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML), and acute myeloid leukemia (AML) associated with complete monosomy 7 (−7) or deletion of the long arm of chromosome 7 (7q−). Patients with therapy-induced disease were excluded. The morphologic diagnoses according to modified FAB criteria were: MDS in 72 (refractory anemia (RA) in 11, RA with excess of blasts (RAEB) in eight, RAEB in transformation (RAEB-T) in 10, JMML in 43), and AML in 28. The median age at presentation was 2.8 years (range 2 months to 15 years), being lowest in JMML (1.1 year). Loss of chromosome 7 as the sole cytogenetic abnormality was observed in 75% of those with MDS compared with 32% of those with AML. Predisposing conditions (including familial MDS/AML) were found in 20%. Three-year survival was 82% in RA, 63% in RAEB, 45% in JMML, 34% in AML, and 8% in RAEB-T. Children with −7 alone had a superior survival than those with other cytogenetic abnormalities: this was solely due to a better survival in MDS (3-year survival 56 vs 24%). The reverse was found in AML (3-year survival 13% in −7 alone vs 44% in other cytogenetic groups). Stable disease for several years was documented in more than half the patients with RA or RAEB. Patients with RA, RAEB or JMML treated with bone marrow transplantation (BMT) without prior chemotherapy had a 3-year survival of 73%. The morphologic diagnosis was the strongest prognostic factor. Only patients with a diagnosis of JMML fitted what has previously been referred to as the monosomy 7 syndrome. Our data give no support to the concept of monosomy 7 as a distinct syndrome.


Leukemia | 2002

Real-time quantitative PCR detection of WT1 gene expression in children with AML: prognostic significance, correlation with disease status and residual disease detection by flow cytometry

J Trka; Marketa Kalinova; Ondřej Hrušák; Jan Zuna; Ondrej Krejci; J Madžo; Petr Sedlacek; V. Vávra; Kyra Michalova; Marie Jarosova; Jan Starý

The clinical significance of WT1 gene expression at diagnosis and during therapy of AML has not yet been resolved. We analysed WT1 expression at presentation in an unselected group of 47 childhood AML patients using real-time quantitative reverse-transcription PCR. We also showed that within the first 30 h following aspiration RQ-RT-PCR results were not influenced by transportation time. We observed lower levels of WT1 transcript in AML M5 (P = 0.0015); no association was found between expression levels and sex, initial leukocyte count and karyotype-based prognostic groups. There was significant correlation between very low WT1 expression at presentation and excellent outcome (EFS P = 0.0014). Combined analysis of WT1 levels, three-colour flow cytometry residual disease detection and the course of the disease in 222 samples from 28 children with AML showed remarkable correlation. Fourteen patients expressed high WT1 levels at presentation. In eight of them, who suffered relapse or did not reach complete remission, dynamics of WT1 levels clearly correlated with the disease status and residual disease by flow cytometry. We conclude that very low WT1 levels at presentation represent a good prognostic factor and that RQ-RT-PCR-based analysis of WT1 expression is a promising and rapid approach for monitoring of MRD in approximately half of paediatric AML patients.


Blood | 2016

Prevalence, clinical characteristics, and prognosis of GATA2-related myelodysplastic syndromes in children and adolescents

Marcin W. Wlodarski; Shinsuke Hirabayashi; Victor Pastor; Jan Starý; Henrik Hasle; Riccardo Masetti; Michael Dworzak; M Schmugge; Marry M. van den Heuvel-Eibrink; Marek Ussowicz; Barbara De Moerloose; Albert Catala; Owen P. Smith; Petr Sedlacek; Arjan C. Lankester; Marco Zecca; Victoria Bordon; Susanne Matthes-Martin; Jonas Abrahamsson; Jörn Sven Kühl; Karl Walter Sykora; Michael H. Albert; Bartlomiej Przychodzien; Jaroslaw P. Maciejewski; Stephan Schwarz; Gudrun Göhring; Brigitte Schlegelberger; Annamaria Cseh; Peter Noellke; Ayami Yoshimi

Germline GATA2 mutations cause cellular deficiencies with high propensity for myeloid disease. We investigated 426 children and adolescents with primary myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and 82 cases with secondary MDS enrolled in 2 consecutive prospective studies of the European Working Group of MDS in Childhood (EWOG-MDS) conducted in Germany over a period of 15 years. Germline GATA2 mutations accounted for 15% of advanced and 7% of all primary MDS cases, but were absent in children with MDS secondary to therapy or acquired aplastic anemia. Mutation carriers were older at diagnosis and more likely to present with monosomy 7 and advanced disease compared with wild-type cases. For stratified analysis according to karyotype, 108 additional primary MDS patients registered with EWOG-MDS were studied. Overall, we identified 57 MDS patients with germline GATA2 mutations. GATA2 mutations were highly prevalent among patients with monosomy 7 (37%, all ages) reaching its peak in adolescence (72% of adolescents with monosomy 7). Unexpectedly, monocytosis was more frequent in GATA2-mutated patients. However, when adjusted for the selection bias from monosomy 7, mutational status had no effect on the hematologic phenotype. Finally, overall survival and outcome of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) were not influenced by mutational status. This study identifies GATA2 mutations as the most common germline defect predisposing to pediatric MDS with a very high prevalence in adolescents with monosomy 7. GATA2 mutations do not confer poor prognosis in childhood MDS. However, the high risk for progression to advanced disease must guide decision-making toward timely HSCT.


Blood | 2013

Randomized trial comparing liposomal daunorubicin with idarubicin as induction for pediatric acute myeloid leukemia: results from Study AML-BFM 2004

Ursula Creutzig; Martin Zimmermann; Jean-Pierre Bourquin; Michael Dworzak; Gudrun Fleischhack; Norbert Graf; Thomas Klingebiel; Bernhard Kremens; Thomas Lehrnbecher; Christine von Neuhoff; J. Ritter; Annette Sander; André Schrauder; Arend von Stackelberg; Jan Starý; Dirk Reinhardt

Outcomes of patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) improve significantly by intensification of induction. To further intensify anthracycline dosage without increasing cardiotoxicity, we compared potentially less cardiotoxic liposomal daunorubicin (L-DNR) to idarubicin at a higher-than-equivalent dose (80 vs 12 mg/m(2) per day for 3 days) during induction. In the multicenter therapy-optimization trial AML-BFM 2004, 521 of 611 pediatric patients (85%) were randomly assigned to L-DNR or idarubicin induction. Five-year results in both treatment arms were similar (overall survival 76% ± 3% [L-DNR] vs 75% ± 3% [idarubicin], Plogrank = .65; event-free survival [EFS] 59% ± 3% vs 53% ± 3%, Plogrank = .25; cumulative incidence of relapse 29% ± 3% vs 31% ± 3%, P(Gray) = .75), as were EFS results for standard (72% ± 5% vs 68% ± 5%, Plogrank = .47) and high-risk (51% ± 4% vs 46% ± 4%, Plogrank = .45) patients. L-DNR resulted in significantly better probability of EFS in patients with t(8;21). Overall, treatment-related mortality was lower with L-DNR than idarubicin (2/257 vs 10/264 patients, P = .04). Grade 3/4 cardiotoxicity was rare after induction (4 L-DNR vs 5 idarubicin). Only 1 L-DNR and 3 idarubicin patients presented with subclinical or mild cardiomyopathy during follow-up. In conclusion, at the given dose, L-DNR has overall antileukemic activity comparable to idarubicin, promises to be more active in subgroups, and causes less treatment-related mortality. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00111345.


Leukemia | 2004

The International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS) for childhood myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML)

Henrik Hasle; Irith Baumann; Eva Bergsträsser; Susanna Fenu; Alexandra Fischer; Gabriela Kardos; Gitte Kerndrup; F Locatelli; Tim Rogge; Kirk R. Schultz; Jan Starý; Monika Trebo; M.M. van den Heuvel-Eibrink; Jochen Harbott; Peter Nöllke; C. Niemeyer

The International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS) for myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) is based upon weighted data on bone marrow (BM) blast percentage, cytopenia, and cytogenetics, separating patients into four prognostic groups. We analyzed the value of the IPSS in 142 children with de novo MDS and 166 children with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML) enrolled in retro- and prospective studies of the European Working Group on childhood MDS (EWOG-MDS). Survivals in MDS and JMML were analyzed separately. Among the criteria considered by the IPSS score, only BM blasts <5% and platelets >100 × 109/l were significantly associated with a superior survival in MDS. In JMML, better survival was associated with platelets >40 × 109/l, but not with any other IPSS factors including cytogenetics. In conclusion, the IPSS is of limited value in both pediatric MDS and JMML. The results reflect the differences between myelodysplastic and myeloproliferative diseases in children and adults.


Leukemia | 1999

TEL/AML1 positivity in childhood ALL: average or better prognosis?

Jan Zuna; Ondřej Hrušák; Marketa Kalinova; Katerina Muzikova; Jan Starý; J Trka

The presence of TEL/AML1 fusion gene in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) defines a subgroup of patients with better than average outcome. However, the prognostic significance of this aberration has recently been disputed by the Berlin–Frankfurt–Münster (BFM) study group due to its relatively high incidence found in relapsed patients (19.6% and 21.9%, in two cohorts). In contrast, only four out of 45 (8.9%) unselected relapsed patients (all of whom had been treated according to BFM protocols) in the Czech Republic carry this fusion. From March 1995 to June 1998, 41 out of 190 (21.6%) newly diagnosed children with ALL were TEL/AML1-positive. There is a statistically significant difference between the incidence of TEL/AML1 fusion at diagnosis and at relapse within our group (P = 0.035). Interim analysis of the minimal residual disease (MRD) detection shows heterogeneity within the group of newly diagnosed TEL/AML1-positive leukaemias – 10 out of 24 patients tested at the end of induction therapy had detectable levels of MRD. However, only one of these patients reached relapse-predictive level (10−3) of MRD. In conclusion, we corroborate low frequency of TEL/AML1 positivity among relapsed patients with ALL among Czech children who are treated by the BFM protocols. Moreover, we demonstrate different patterns of bone marrow clean-up in TEL/AML1-positive patients.


Leukemia | 2011

Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for advanced myelodysplastic syndrome in children: results of the EWOG-MDS 98 study

Brigitte Strahm; Peter Nöllke; Marco Zecca; Elisabeth T. Korthof; Marc Bierings; Ingrid Furlan; Petr Sedlacek; A Chybicka; M Schmugge; Victoria Bordon; Christina Peters; Aengus O'Marcaigh; C D de Heredia; Eva Bergstraesser; Barbara De Moerloose; M.M. van den Heuvel-Eibrink; Jan Starý; Monika Trebo; Dorota Wojcik; Charlotte M. Niemeyer; F. Locatelli

We report on the outcome of children with advanced primary myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) transplanted from an HLA-matched sibling (MSD) or an unrelated donor (UD) following a preparative regimen with busulfan, cyclophosphamide and melphalan. Ninety-seven patients with refractory anemia with excess blasts (RAEB, n=53), RAEB in transformation (RAEB-T, n=29) and myelodysplasia-related acute myeloid leukemia (MDR-AML, n=15) enrolled in the European Working Group of MDS in Childhood (EWOG-MDS) 98 study and given hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) were analyzed. Median age at HSCT was 11.1 years (range 1.4–19.0). Thirty-nine children were transplanted from an MSD, whereas 58 were given the allograft from a UD (n=57) or alternative family donor (n=1). Stem cell source was bone marrow (n=69) or peripheral blood (n=28). With a median follow-up of 3.9 years (range 0.1–10.9), the 5-year probability of overall survival is 63%, while the 5-year cumulative incidence of transplantation-related mortality (TRM) and relapse is 21% each. Age at HSCT greater than 12 years, interval between diagnosis and HSCT longer than 4 months, and occurrence of acute or extensive chronic graft-versus-host disease were associated with increased TRM. The risk of relapse increased with more advanced disease. This study indicates that HSCT following a myeloablative preparative regimen offers a high probability of survival for children with advanced MDS.


Blood | 2008

Genotype-phenotype correlation in cases of juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia with clonal RAS mutations

Christian Flotho; Christian P. Kratz; Eva Bergsträsser; Henrik Hasle; Jan Starý; Monika Trebo; Marry M. van den Heuvel-Eibrink; Dorota Wojcik; Marco Zecca; Franco Locatelli; Charlotte M. Niemeyer

To the editor: In a recent issue of Blood , Matsuda et al reported 11 children with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML) and clonal NRAS or KRAS mutations.[1][1] Three patients showed improvement of various clinical and laboratory features over a 2- to 4-year period without chemotherapy or

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Ondřej Hrušák

Charles University in Prague

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Petr Sedlacek

Charles University in Prague

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Ester Mejstříková

Charles University in Prague

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Jan Zuna

Charles University in Prague

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Yahia Jabali

Charles University in Prague

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