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Monitoring of Leukemia Clones in B-cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia at Diagnosis and During Treatment by Single-cell DNA Amplicon Sequencing

Authors :
Sarah Meyers
Llucia Alberti-Servera
Olga Gielen
Margot Erard
Toon Swings
Jolien De Bie
Lucienne Michaux
Barbara Dewaele
Nancy Boeckx
Anne Uyttebroeck
Kim De Keersmaecker
Johan Maertens
Heidi Segers
Jan Cools
Sofie Demeyer
Source :
HemaSphere, Vol 6, Iss 4, p e700 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is characterized by the presence of chromosomal changes, including numerical changes, translocations, and deletions, which are often associated with additional single-nucleotide mutations. In this study, we used single cell–targeted DNA sequencing to evaluate the clonal heterogeneity of B-ALL at diagnosis and during chemotherapy treatment. We designed a custom DNA amplicon library targeting mutational hotspot regions (in 110 genes) present in ALL, and we measured the presence of mutations and small insertions/deletions (indels) in bone marrow or blood samples from 12 B-ALL patients, with a median of 7973 cells per sample. Nine of the 12 cases showed at least 1 subclonal mutation, of which cases with PAX5 alterations or high hyperdiploidy (with intermediate to good prognosis) showed a high number of subclones (1 to 7) at diagnosis, defined by a variety of mutations in the JAK/STAT, RAS, or FLT3 signaling pathways. Cases with RAS pathway mutations had multiple mutations in FLT3, NRAS, KRAS, or BRAF in various clones. For those cases where we detected multiple mutational clones at diagnosis, we also studied blood samples during the first weeks of chemotherapy treatment. The leukemia clones disappeared during treatment with various kinetics, and few cells with mutations were easily detectable, even at low frequency (2 subclones at diagnosis and that even very rare mutant cells can be detected at diagnosis or during treatment by single cell–targeted DNA sequencing.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25729241 and 00000000
Volume :
6
Issue :
4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
HemaSphere
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.780cd405cf54cd9a5f9fb1d197b4b0f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/HS9.0000000000000700