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Data from Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia with Mutated IGHV4-34 Receptors: Shared and Distinct Immunogenetic Features and Clinical Outcomes

Authors :
Kostas Stamatopoulos
Paolo Ghia
Richard Rosenquist
Anastasia Hadzidimitriou
Frederic Davi
Chrysoula Belessi
Nikos Darzentas
Ioanna Chouvarda
Stephan Stilgenbauer
Diane F. Jelinek
Gianluca Gaidano
David Oscier
Nikos Maglaveras
Nicholas Chiorazzi
Elias Campo
Michael Hallek
Sarka Pospisilova
Anton W. Langerak
Hartmut Döhner
Carsten Niemann
Marco Montillo
Livio Trentin
Darko Antic
Ioannis Vlahavas
Achilles Anagnostopoulos
Gunnar Juliusson
Panagiotis Panagiotidis
Marie-Paule Lefranc
Véronique Giudicelli
Charles C. Chu
Karin E. Smedby
Larry Mansouri
Lone Bredo Pedersen
Christiane Pott
Jasmin Bahlo
Monica Facco
Maria Chatzouli
Dirk Kienle
Mark Catherwood
Teodora Karan-Djurasevic
Tatiana Tzenou
Silvio Veronese
Andrey Sudarikov
Niki Stavroyianni
Lydia Scarfo
Fie Juhl Vojdeman
Yorick Sandberg
Alba Navarro
Zadie Davis
Davide Rossi
Myriam Boudjogra
Karla Plevova
Tait Shanafelt
Xiao-Jie Yan
Eugen Tausch
Stavroula Ntoufa
Eva Minga
Lesley-Ann Sutton
Andreas Agathangelidis
Ioannis Kavakiotis
Panagiotis Baliakas
Aliki Xochelli
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Purpose: We sought to investigate whether B cell receptor immunoglobulin (BcR IG) stereotypy is associated with particular clinicobiological features among chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients expressing mutated BcR IG (M-CLL) encoded by the IGHV4-34 gene, and also ascertain whether these associations could refine prognostication.Experimental Design: In a series of 19,907 CLL cases with available immunogenetic information, we identified 339 IGHV4-34–expressing cases assigned to one of the four largest stereotyped M-CLL subsets, namely subsets #4, #16, #29 and #201, and investigated in detail their clinicobiological characteristics and disease outcomes.Results: We identified shared and subset-specific patterns of somatic hypermutation (SHM) among patients assigned to these subsets. The greatest similarity was observed between subsets #4 and #16, both including IgG-switched cases (IgG-CLL). In contrast, the least similarity was detected between subsets #16 and #201, the latter concerning IgM/D-expressing CLL. Significant differences between subsets also involved disease stage at diagnosis and the presence of specific genomic aberrations. IgG subsets #4 and #16 emerged as particularly indolent with a significantly (P < 0.05) longer time-to-first-treatment (TTFT; median TTFT: not yet reached) compared with the IgM/D subsets #29 and #201 (median TTFT: 11 and 12 years, respectively).Conclusions: Our findings support the notion that BcR IG stereotypy further refines prognostication in CLL, superseding the immunogenetic distinction based solely on SHM load. In addition, the observed distinct genetic aberration landscapes and clinical heterogeneity suggest that not all M-CLL cases are equal, prompting further research into the underlying biological background with the ultimate aim of tailored patient management. Clin Cancer Res; 23(17); 5292–301. ©2017 AACR.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....141c24fb06d5c3e1a7289bcc228ffa82
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.c.6526230