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Clinical effects of driver somatic mutations on the outcomes of patients with myelodysplastic syndromes treated with allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation

Authors :
Cristina Tresoldi
Mariella Cuzzola
Orietta Spinelli
Mario Cazzola
Andrea Bacigalupo
Silvia Luchetti
Ettore Rizzo
Silvia Zibellini
Laura Pezzetti
Silvia Catricalà
Benedetto Bruno
Marianna Rossi
Marta Ubezio
Simona Sica
Chiara Milanesi
Maria Teresa Voso
Emilio Paolo Alessandrino
Riccardo Bellazzi
Anna Gallì
Sarah Pozzi
Armando Santoro
Virginia Valeria Ferretti
Massimo Bernardi
Emanuele Angelucci
Alessandro Rambaldi
Alberto Bosi
Pietro Pioltelli
Paola Marenco
Ivan Limongelli
Fabio Ciceri
Matteo G. Della Porta
Alberto Malovini
Elli Papaemmanuil
Maria Teresa Van Lint
Francesca Bonifazi
Bernardino Allione
Alberto Riva
Della Porta, Matteo G.
Gallì, Anna
Bacigalupo, Andrea
Zibellini, Silvia
Bernardi, Massimo
Rizzo, Ettore
Allione, Bernardino
Van Lint, Maria Teresa
Pioltelli, Pietro
Marenco, Paola
Bosi, Alberto
Voso, Maria Teresa
Sica, Simona
Cuzzola, Mariella
Angelucci, Emanuele
Rossi, Marianna
Ubezio, Marta
Malovini, Alberto
Limongelli, Ivan
Ferretti, Virginia V.
Spinelli, Orietta
Tresoldi, Cristina
Pozzi, Sarah
Luchetti, Silvia
Pezzetti, Laura
Catricalà, Silvia
Milanesi, Chiara
Riva, Alberto
Bruno, Benedetto
Ciceri, Fabio
Bonifazi, Francesca
Bellazzi, Riccardo
Papaemmanuil, Elli
Santoro, Armando
Alessandrino, Emilio P.
Rambaldi, Alessandro
Cazzola, Mario
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
American Society of Clinical Oncology, 2016.

Abstract

Purpose The genetic basis of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) is heterogeneous, and various combinations of somatic mutations are associated with different clinical phenotypes and outcomes. Whether the genetic basis of MDS influences the outcome of allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) is unclear. Patients and Methods We studied 401 patients with MDS or acute myeloid leukemia (AML) evolving from MDS (MDS/AML). We used massively parallel sequencing to examine tumor samples collected before HSCT for somatic mutations in 34 recurrently mutated genes in myeloid neoplasms. We then analyzed the impact of mutations on the outcome of HSCT. Results Overall, 87% of patients carried one or more oncogenic mutations. Somatic mutations of ASXL1, RUNX1, and TP53 were independent predictors of relapse and overall survival after HSCT in both patients with MDS and patients with MDS/AML (P values ranging from .003 to .035). In patients with MDS/AML, gene ontology (ie, secondary-type AML carrying mutations in genes of RNA splicing machinery, TP53-mutated AML, or de novo AML) was an independent predictor of posttransplantation outcome (P = .013). The impact of ASXL1, RUNX1, and TP53 mutations on posttransplantation survival was independent of the revised International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS-R). Combining somatic mutations and IPSS-R risk improved the ability to stratify patients by capturing more prognostic information at an individual level. Accounting for various combinations of IPSS-R risk and somatic mutations, the 5-year probability of survival after HSCT ranged from 0% to 73%. Conclusion Somatic mutation in ASXL1, RUNX1, or TP53 is independently associated with unfavorable outcomes and shorter survival after allogeneic HSCT for patients with MDS and MDS/AML. Accounting for these genetic lesions may improve the prognostication precision in clinical practice and in designing clinical trials.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....103a559448b6bc8ed4fe93871ba92a87