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The mutational burden of therapy-related myeloid neoplasms is similar to primary myelodysplastic syndrome but has a distinctive distribution

Authors :
Teodora Kuzmanovic
Wendy T Parker
Deepak Singhal
Susan Branford
Raghu Gowda
Peer Arts
Jinghua Feng
Rakchha Chhetri
Ian D. Lewis
Sarah Moore
Monika M Kutyna
Suzanne Edwards
Peter Bardy
Joel Geoghegan
Milena Babic
Jaroslaw P. Maciejewski
Richard J D'Andrea
Anna L. Brown
Andreas W. Schreiber
Devendra K Hiwase
Hamish S. Scott
Nimit Singhal
Li Yan A Wee
Luen B. To
Paul Wang
Christopher N. Hahn
Smita Hiwase
Singhal, Deepak
Wee, Li Yan A
Kutyna, Monika M
Chhetri, Rakchha
Schreiber, Andreas W
Feng, Jinghua
Branford, Susan
D'Andrea, Richard J
Hiwase, DK
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
UK : Nature Publishing, 2019.

Abstract

Therapy-related myeloid neoplasms (T-MN) are poorly characterized secondary hematological malignancies following chemotherapy/radiotherapy exposure. We compared the clinical and mutational characteristics of T-MN (n = 129) and primary myelodysplastic syndrome (P-MDS, n = 108) patients. Although the somatic mutation frequency was similar between T-MN and P-MDS patients (93% in both groups), the pattern was distinct. TP53 mutations were more frequent in T-MN (29.5 vs. 7%), while spliceosomal complex mutations were more common in P-MDS (56.5 vs. 25.6%). In contrast to P-MDS, the ring sideroblasts (RS) phenotype was not associated with better survival in T-MN, most probably due to genetic association with TP53 mutations. SF3B1 was mutated in 96% of P-MDS with ≥15% RS, but in only 32% T-MN. TP53 mutations were detected in 92% T-MN with ≥15% RS and SF3B1 wild-type cases. Interestingly, T-MN and P-MDS patients with “Very low” or “Low” Revised International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS-R) showed similar biological and clinical characteristics. In a Cox regression analysis, TP53 mutation was a poor prognostic factor in T-MN, independent of IPSS-R cytogenetics, disease-modifying therapy, and NRAS mutation. Our data have direct implications for T-MN management and provide evidence that, in addition to conventional disease parameters, mutational analysis should be incorporated in T-MN risk stratification Refereed/Peer-reviewed

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5830d3ac3175d481ce991c11ff43983c