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Dive into the research topics where José María Alonso is active.

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Featured researches published by José María Alonso.


Blood | 2009

Molecular stratification model for prognosis in cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia

Carlos Santamaría; María C. Chillón; Ramón García-Sanz; Cristina Pérez; Maria Dolores Caballero; Fernando Ramos; Alfonso García de Coca; José María Alonso; Pilar Giraldo; Teresa Bernal; José A. Queizán; Juan N. Rodríguez; Pascual Fernández-Abellán; Abelardo Bárez; Maria Jesús Peñarrubia; Ana Balanzategui; Maria Belen Vidriales; María Eugenia Sarasquete; Miguel Alcoceba; Joaquín Díaz-Mediavilla; Jesús F. San Miguel; Marcos González

We have evaluated 9 new molecular markers (ERG, EVI1, MLL-PTD, MN1, PRAME, RHAMM, and WT1 gene-expression levels plus FLT3 and NPM1 mutations) in 121 de novo cytogenetically normal acute myeloblastic leukemias. In the multivariate analysis, high ERG or EVI1 and low PRAME expressions were associated with a shorter relapse-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS). A 0 to 3 score was given by assigning a value of 0 to favorable parameters (low ERG, low EVI1, and high PRAME) and 1 to adverse parameters. This model distinguished 4 subsets of patients with different OS (2-year OS of 79%, 65%, 46%, and 27%; P = .001) and RFS (2-year RFS of 92%, 65%, 49%, and 43%; P = .005). Furthermore, this score identified patients with different OS (P = .001) and RFS (P = .013), even within the FLT3/NPM1 intermediate-risk/high-risk subgroups. Here we propose a new molecular score for cytogenetically normal acute myeloblastic leukemias, which could improve patient risk-stratification.


Annals of Hematology | 2010

BAALC is an important predictor of refractoriness to chemotherapy and poor survival in intermediate-risk acute myeloid leukemia (AML)

Carlos Santamaría; María C. Chillón; Ramón García-Sanz; Cristina Pérez; Maria Dolores Caballero; Maria Victoria Mateos; Fernando Ramos; Alfonso García de Coca; José María Alonso; Pilar Giraldo; Teresa Bernal; José A. Queizán; Juan N. Rodríguez; Noemi Puig; Ana Balanzategui; María Eugenia Sarasquete; Miguel Alcoceba; Joaquín Díaz-Mediavilla; Jesús F. San Miguel; Marcos González

We have analyzed brain and acute leukemia, cytoplasmic (BAALC) gene expression and other genetic markers (ERG, EVI1, MN1, PRAME, WT1, FLT3, and NPM1 mutations) in 127 intermediate-risk acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients: 98 cytogenetically normal and 29 with intermediate-risk cytogenetic alterations. High versus low BAALC expressers showed a higher refractoriness to induction treatment (31% vs 10%; p = .005), lower complete remission rate after salvage therapy (82% vs 97%; p = .010), and lower 3-year overall (23% vs 58%, p < .001) and relapse-free survival (26% vs 52%, p = .006). Similar results were found when cytogenetic subgroups were analyzed separately. Multivariate models confirmed the unfavorable prognosis of this marker. In conclusion, BAALC is a relevant prognostic marker in intermediate-risk AML.


Leukemia Research | 2009

High FOXO3a expression is associated with a poorer prognosis in AML with normal cytogenetics.

Carlos Santamaría; María C. Chillón; Ramón García-Sanz; Cristina Pérez; Maria Dolores Caballero; Fernando Ramos; Alfonso García de Coca; José María Alonso; Pilar Giraldo; Teresa Bernal; José A. Queizán; Juan N. Rodríguez; Pascual Fernández-Abellán; Abelardo Bárez; Maria Jesús Peñarrubia; Maria Belen Vidriales; Ana Balanzategui; María Eugenia Sarasquete; Miguel Alcoceba; Joaquín Díaz-Mediavilla; Jesús F. San Miguel; Marcos González

The PI3/AKT pathway is up-regulated in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), but its prognostic relevance in cytogenetically normal AML (CN-AML) is unclear. We evaluated RNA levels of AKT and two downstream substrates (FOXO3a-p27) in 110 de novo CN-AML, included in the Spanish PETHEMA therapeutic protocols. Patients with high FOXO3a gene expression displayed shorter OS (p=0.015) and RFS (p=0.048) than low FOXO3a expressers. Features selected in the multivariate analysis as having an independent prognostic value for a shorter survival were WBC>50x10(9)/L, age >65 years and high FOXO3a expression. We concluded that FOXO3a assessment could contribute to improve the molecular-based risk stratification in CN-AML.


Blood | 2016

Phenotypic, transcriptomic, and genomic features of clonal plasma cells in light-chain amyloidosis

Bruno Paiva; Joaquin Martinez-Lopez; Luis A. Corchete; Beatriz Sanchez-Vega; Inmaculada Rapado; Noemi Puig; Santiago Barrio; Maria Luz Sanchez; Diego Alignani; Marta Lasa; Alfonso García de Coca; Emilia Pardal; Albert Oriol; Maria-Esther Gonzalez Garcia; Fernando Escalante; Tomás J. González-López; Luis Palomera; José María Alonso; Felipe Prosper; Alberto Orfao; Maria Belen Vidriales; Maria Victoria Mateos; Juan José Lahuerta; Norma C. Gutiérrez; Jesús F. San Miguel

Immunoglobulin light-chain amyloidosis (AL) and multiple myeloma (MM) are 2 distinct monoclonal gammopathies that involve the same cellular compartment: clonal plasma cells (PCs). Despite the fact that knowledge about MM PC biology has significantly increased in the last decade, the same does not apply for AL. Here, we used an integrative phenotypic, molecular, and genomic approach to study clonal PCs from 24 newly diagnosed patients with AL. Through principal-component-analysis, we demonstrated highly overlapping phenotypic profiles between AL and both monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance and MM PCs. However, in contrast to MM, highly purified fluorescence-activated cell-sorted clonal PCs from AL (n = 9) showed almost normal transcriptome, with only 38 deregulated genes vs normal PCs; these included a few tumor-suppressor (CDH1, RCAN) and proapoptotic (GLIPR1, FAS) genes. Notwithstanding, clonal PCs in AL (n = 11) were genomically unstable, with a median of 9 copy number alterations (CNAs) per case, many of such CNAs being similar to those found in MM. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) performed in 5 AL patients revealed a median of 15 nonrecurrent mutations per case. Altogether, our results show that in the absence of a unifying mutation by WES, clonal PCs in AL display phenotypic and CNA profiles similar to MM, but their transcriptome is remarkably similar to that of normal PCs.


Haematologica | 2017

Recovery of polyclonal immunoglobulins one year after autologous stem cell transplantation as a long-term predictor marker of progression and survival in multiple myeloma.

Verónica González-Calle; Seila Cerda; Jorge Labrador; Eduardo Sobejano; Beatriz González-Mena; Carmen Aguilera; Enrique M. Ocio; Maria Belen Vidriales; Noemi Puig; Norma C. Gutiérrez; Ramón García-Sanz; José María Alonso; Rosa López; Carlos Aguilar; Alfonso García de Coca; Roberto Hernandez; José Mariano Hernández; Fernando Escalante; Maria-Victoria Mateos

Immunoparesis or suppression of polyclonal immunoglobulins is a very common condition in newly diagnosed myeloma patients. However, the recovery of polyclonal immunoglobulins in the setting of immune reconstitution after autologous stem cell transplantation and its effect on outcome has not yet been explored. We conducted this study in a cohort of 295 patients who had undergone autologous transplantation. In order to explore the potential role of immunoglubulin recovery as a dynamic predictor of progression or survival after transplantation, conditional probabilities of progression-free survival and overall survival were estimated according to immunoglobulin recovery at different time points using a landmark approach. One year after transplant, when B-cell reconstitution is expected to be completed, among 169 patients alive and progression free, 88 patients (52%) showed immunoglobulin recovery and 81 (48%) did not. Interestingly, the group with immunoglobulin recovery had a significantly longer median progression-free survival than the group with persistent immunoparesis (median 60.4 vs. 27.9 months, respectively; Hazard Ratio: 0.45, 95%Confidence Interval: 0.31–0.66; P<0.001), and improved overall survival (11.3 vs. 7.3 years; Hazard Ratio: 0.45, 95%Confidence Interval: 0.27–0.74; P=0.002). Furthermore, the percentage of normal plasma cells detected by flow cytometry in the bone marrow assessed at day 100 after transplantation was associated with the immunoglobulin recovery at that time and may predict immunoglobulin recovery in the subsequent months: nine months and one year. In conclusion, the recovery of polyclonal immunoglobulins one year after autologous transplantation in myeloma patients is an independent long-term predictor marker for progression and survival.


PLOS ONE | 2015

A Low Frequency of Losses in 11q Chromosome Is Associated with Better Outcome and Lower Rate of Genomic Mutations in Patients with Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia

José Ángel Hernández; María Hernández-Sánchez; Ana E. Rodríguez-Vicente; Vera Grossmann; Rosa Collado; Cecilia Heras; Anna Puiggros; Ana África Martín; Noemi Puig; Rocío Benito; Cristina Robledo; Julio Delgado; Teresa Gonzalez; José A. Queizán; Josefina Galende; Ignacio de la Fuente; Guillermo Martín-Núñez; José María Alonso; Pau Abrisqueta; Elisa Luño; Isabel Marugán; Isabel González-Gascón; Francesc Bosch; Alexander Kohlmann; Marcos González; Blanca Espinet; Jesús María Hernández-Rivas; Grupo Cooperativo Español de Citogenética Hematológica; Grupo Español de Leucemia Linfática Crónica

To analyze the impact of the 11q deleted (11q-) cells in CLL patients on the time to first therapy (TFT) and overall survival (OS), 2,493 patients with CLL were studied. 242 patients (9.7%) had 11q-. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) studies showed a threshold of 40% of deleted cells to be optimal for showing that clinical differences in terms of TFT and OS within 11q- CLLs. In patients with ≥40% of losses in 11q (11q-H) (74%), the median TFT was 19 months compared with 44 months in CLL patients with <40% del(11q) (11q-L) (P<0.0001). In the multivariate analysis, only the presence of 11q-L, mutated IGHV status, early Binet stage and absence of extended lymphadenopathy were associated with longer TFT. Patients with 11q-H had an OS of 90 months, while in the 11q-L group the OS was not reached (P = 0.008). The absence of splenomegaly (P = 0.02), low LDH (P = 0.018) or β2M (P = 0.006), and the presence of 11q-L (P = 0.003) were associated with a longer OS. In addition, to detect the presence of mutations in the ATM, TP53, NOTCH1, SF3B1, MYD88, FBXW7, XPO1 and BIRC3 genes, a select cohort of CLL patients with losses in 11q was sequenced by next-generation sequencing of amplicons. Eighty % of CLLs with 11q- showed mutations and fewer patients with low frequencies of 11q- had mutations among genes examined (50% vs 94.1%, P = 0.023). In summary, CLL patients with <40% of 11q- had a long TFT and OS that could be associated with the presence of fewer mutated genes.


PLOS ONE | 2017

HLA specificities are associated with prognosis in IGHV-mutated CLL-like high-count monoclonal B cell lymphocytosis

María García-Álvarez; Miguel Alcoceba; Miriam López-Parra; Noemi Puig; Alicia Antón; Ana Balanzategui; Isabel Prieto-Conde; Cristina Jiménez; María Eugenia Sarasquete; M. Carmen Chillón; María Laura Gutiérrez; Rocío Corral; José María Alonso; José A. Queizán; Julia Vidán; Emilia Pardal; Maria Jesús Peñarrubia; José María Bastida; Ramón García-Sanz; Luis Marín; Marcos González

Introduction Molecular alterations leading progression of asymptomatic CLL-like high-count monoclonal B lymphocytosis (hiMBL) to chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) remain poorly understood. Recently, genome-wide association studies have found 6p21.3, where the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) system is coded, to be a susceptibility risk region for CLL. Previous studies have produced discrepant results regarding the association between HLA and CLL development and outcome, but no studies have been performed on hiMBL. Aims We evaluated the role of HLA class I (-A, -B and -C) and class II (-DRB1 and -DQB1) in hiMBL/CLL susceptibility, hiMBL progression to CLL, and treatment requirement in a large series of 263 patients diagnosed in our center with hiMBL (n = 156) or Binet A CLL (n = 107). Results No consistent association between HLA specificities and hiMBL or CLL susceptibility was found. With a median follow-up of 7.7 years, 48/156 hiMBLs (33%) evolved to asymptomatic CLLs, while 16 hiMBLs (10%) and 44 CLLs (41%) required treatment. No HLA specificities were found to be significantly associated with hiMBL progression or treatment in the whole cohort. However, within antigen-experienced immunoglobulin heavy-chain (IGHV)-mutated hiMBLs, which represents the highest proportion of hiMBL cases (81%), the presence of HLA-DQB1*03 showed a trend to a higher risk of progression to CLL (60% vs. 26%, P = 0.062). Moreover, HLA-DQB1*02 specificity was associated with a lesser requirement for 15-year treatment (10% vs. 36%, P = 0.012). Conclusion In conclusion, our results suggest a role for HLA in IGHV-mutated hiMBL prognosis, and are consistent with the growing evidence of the influence of 6p21 on predisposition to CLL. Larger non-biased series are required to enable definitive conclusions to be drawn.


Medicina Clinica | 2015

Estudio de incidencia de las neoplasias hematopoyéticas en Castilla y León

José Antonio Rodríguez-García; Lourdes Vázquez; Fernando Ramos; Beatriz Cuevas; Alejandro Martín; Alicia Smucler; Dulce Nombre Guerola; Alberto Cantalapiedra; José María Alonso; Silvia Fernández; Eva Díez; María Jesús Rodríguez; María José Calmuntia; Carlos Aguilar; Magdalena Sierra; José Antonio Gracia; María José Cebeira; Rosa Cantalejo

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE We aimed to assess the incidence of haematological neoplasms (HNs) in Castilla y León (2,5 million inhabitants) and its distribution by age, gender and histological type. PATIENTS AND METHOD The epidemiological profile based on the described variables of the 10,943 HNs diagnosed during a 10-years period was analyzed, compared with other studies. RESULTS The overall age-adjusted incidence was 29.4 cases/10(5) inhabitants-year, with some geographical differences. The mean age was 67.3 years, with a turning point between the 6th-7th decades of life from which there was a very significant increase of incidence. Two relevant facts where simultaneous with advancing age: decreased lymphoid neoplasms incidence and increased low degree neoplasms incidence. Lymphoid low degree neoplasms accounted for half of the registered processes, showed the greatest preference for male and reached the mode before the rest of neoplasms. Myeloid neoplasms incidence (9.5) was higher than that reported in other European registries, specially compared to southern European countries, opposite to lymphoid neoplasms incidence (20.0). CONCLUSIONS A higher myeloid neoplasms incidence and lower lymphoid one than expected was observed. The turning point of incidence is between the 6th-7th decades of life, with a preference for male that decreases with age. There is an increased incidence of HNs in the area where a higher density of potentially polluting facilities is concentrated.


Annals of Hematology | 2013

Prognostic impact of the number of methylated genes in myelodysplastic syndromes and acute myeloid leukemias treated with azacytidine

María Abáigar; Fernando Ramos; Rocío Benito; María Díez-Campelo; Javier Sánchez-del-Real; Lourdes Hermosín; Juan N. Rodríguez; Carlos Aguilar; Isabel Recio; José María Alonso; Natalia de las Heras; Marta Megido; M. Fuertes; M.C. Cañizo; Jesús María Hernández-Rivas


Blood | 2014

Development of a High-Throughput Screening Assay with Nurse-like Cell-Based Microenviroment in Chronic Lymphoid Leukemia Cells.

Daniel Primo; Javier de la Serna; Joaquin Martinez; Marcos González; Javier López; Abelardo Bárez; Macarena Ortiz; Javier Loscertales; Julian Vidán; Alicia Rodríguez; Marta Polo; Sandra Irhaeta; José María Alonso; José A. Queizán; Jose Angel Hernandez Rivas; María Jesús Peñarrubia; Julian Gorrochategui; Ana Belén Espinosa; Elena Arroyo; Melanie Oates; Andrew R Pettit; Joan Ballesteros; Pilar Hernández

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Ramón García-Sanz

Spanish National Research Council

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José A. Queizán

Complutense University of Madrid

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Noemi Puig

Spanish National Research Council

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