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Clonal Mutational Landscape of Childhood Myelodysplastic Syndromes

Authors :
Victor Pastor Loyola
Markus Schmugge
Miguel Hernandez-Marti
Albert Català
Barbara De Moerloose
Bartlomiej P Przychodzen
Jan Starý
Roos J. Leguit
Shinsuke Hirabayashi
Riccardo Masetti
G. Kerndrup
Michael Dworzak
Vit Campr
Franco Locatelli
Marek Ussowicz
Pascale Paepe
Ingrid Simonitsch-Klupp
Maureen OxSullivan
Rita Devito
Marcin W. Wlodarski
Owen P. Smith
Marry M. van den Heuvel-Eibrink
Axel Karow
Jadwiga Maldyk
Jaroslaw P. Maciejewski
Brigitte Strahm
Irith Baumann
Emilia J Kozyra
Henrik Hasle
Charlotte M. Niemeyer
Source :
Blood. 126:1662-1662
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2015.

Abstract

Childhood myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) belong to a rare group of disorders of aberrant clonal hematopoiesis manifesting throughout entire childhood and adolescence. We had previously established that GATA2 germline mutations can be considered the most common "first hit" in pediatric MDS seen in 7% of primary MDS. However the secondary somatic aberrations facilitating leukemogenesis are not elucidated in children. Previous sequencing efforts established that most somatic mutations very frequently encountered in adults, i.e. affecting TET2, DNMT3a, and the spliceosome genes, do not play a role in the pathogenesis of childhood MDS. Here we aim to define the global mutational landscape in childhood MDS using targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) approaches. We investigated children and adolescents enrolled in the prospective studies of the European Working Group of Childhood MDS. Diverse target enrichment and NGS strategies were established including hybridization capture and Ampliseq PCR, Illumina Miseq/Hiseq and Iontorrent PGM. We first examined a pilot cohort of 68 patients for mutations in 138 myeloid leukemia genes. This allowed for the identification of recurrently mutated genes that were selected to be included in a pediatric MDS panel encompassing 28 genes. Targeted NGS using the Iontorrent PGM identified known recurrent mutations. However, the high indel error rate and coverage gaps in homopolymeric regions i.e. in ASXL1 precluded further studies. Using inhouse-adapted Ampliseq-Miseq approach we then sequenced DNA from bone marrow of 586 MDS patients (469 primary and 117 secondary MDS after radio/chemotherapy or inherited bone marrow failure syndromes) at an average depth exceeding 700 reads per amplicon. Somatic mutations were identified in 22% of primary MDS patients, with 1, 2 and 3 genes affected in 16%, 4.5%, and 1.5% of cases, respectively. In secondary MDS twice as many patients (46%) carried mutations; 1, 2, and 3 genes were concurrently mutated in 32.5%, 9.5%, and 4% of patients, respectively. Longitudinal NGS analyses and single CFU colony sequencing confirmed the presence of multiple somatic clones evolving in a hierarchical manner throughout disease course. Most frequent mutations identified in more than 1% of our study cohort of primary MDS were: SETBP1 (7%), ASXL1 (6%), NRAS/KRAS (5%), RUNX1 (3%), PTPN11 (3%) and BCOR/BCORL (1.5%); and in secondary MDS: RUNX1 (14.5%), TP53 (9%), NRAS/KRAS (8.5%), ASXL1 (8%), SETBP1 (6%), PTPN11 (6%), CBL (5%), BCOR/BCORL1 (3.4%). Other genes mutated at very low frequency of In conclusion, we established and cross-platform validated a targeted NGS-panel for pediatric MDS, allowing to identify clonal mutations at a sensitivity of at least 10%. In this, to our knowledge largest systematicaly studied cohort of children with MDS we show that mutational load and clonal complexity differs between primary and secondary MDS, and maintains specific patterns for monosomy 7. Although the biological significance of these genomic changes is currently not understood, the emerging distinctive patterns may already be helpful in establishing therapeutic subgroups. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
126
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c080050599278442579c1c35c737de51