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Acute myeloid leukaemia cells express high levels of androgen receptor but do not depend on androgen signaling for survival.

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posted on 2025-11-20, 11:36 authored by Farideh Miraki-Moud, Linda Ariza-McNaughton, Thinzar KoKo, Jad Othman, Randal Stronge, Johann de Bono, Nigel Russell, Ian Thomas, Amanda Gilkes, Alan Burnett, Leandro Rodrigues Santiago, Fay Cafferty, Leo Taussig, Allan Thornhill, Simon O'Connor, Dominique Bonnet, David C Taussig
Male sex is associated with worse outcome in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in many studies. We analyzed the survival of 4281 patients treated with intensive chemotherapy in the AML17 and AML19 trials based on sex. Men had a significantly lower remission rate than women. Men had a higher incidence of adverse cytogenetic features and a lower incidence of the relatively favorable NPM1 mutation. However, male sex was an independent risk factor for survival in multi-variate analysis. We hypothesized that androgen signaling in men could worsen outcomes by protecting AML cells from chemotherapy. We demonstrated high levels of androgen receptor (AR) expression in AML across cytogenetic risk groups. We showed the AR expression was induced by IL-6 signaling in vitro and correlates with poor overall survival. Androgens had no effect on survival of primary AML cells in vitro, nor did they impact gene expression. Androgens did not protect AML cells against chemotherapy either in vitro or in vivo. Similar results were observed with estrogen signaling through estrogen receptor in vitro in AML cells. In conclusion, targeting the androgen pathway may not be a promising clinical strategy and sex hormone signaling in AML cells does not explain the poorer outcomes of men.

Funding

Cancer Research UK (CRUK) (Grant ID: C15966/A24375) Cancer Research UK (CRUK) (Grant ID: C26822, A16484) Cancer Research UK (CRUK) (Grant ID: CRUK/08/025, A29806) Crick (Grant ID: CC2027, Grant title: Bonnet CC2027)

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