| Literature DB >> 24336156 |
Alexandar Tzankov1, Zijun Y Xu-Monette2, Marc Gerhard3, Carlo Visco4, Stephan Dirnhofer3, Nora Gisin3, Karen Dybkaer5, Attilio Orazi6, Govind Bhagat7, Kristy L Richards8, Eric D Hsi9, William W L Choi10, J Han van Krieken11, Maurilio Ponzoni12, Andrés J M Ferreri12, Qing Ye13, Jane N Winter14, John P Farnen15, Miguel A Piris16, Michael B Møller17, M James You2, Timothy McDonnell2, L Jeffrey Medeiros2, Ken H Young2.
Abstract
In order to address the debatable prognostic role of MYC rearrangements in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma patients treated with rituximab, cyclophosphamide, hydroxydaunorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone, we evaluated MYC rearrangements by fluorescence in situ hybridization in 563 cases using break-apart probes and IGH/MYC dual-fusion probes. Concurrent BCL2 and BCL6 aberrations were also assessed. Data were correlated with clinicopathological variables and prognostic parameters. MYC rearrangements were observed in 39/432 evaluable cases (9%), including 4 rearrangements detectable only with the dual-fusion probes, 15 detectable only with the break-apart probes and 20 detectable with both dual-fusion probes and break-apart probes. MYC rearrangements correlated with germinal center B-cell origin (P=0.02), MYC protein expression (P=0.032), and larger tumor mass size (P=0.0003). Patients with MYC rearrangements were more likely to be treatment resistant (P<0.0001). All types of MYC rearrangements were associated with poorer disease-specific survival, that is, 20/39 dead, median disease-specific survival 42 months, compared with 98/393 dead among the non-rearranged cases, median disease-specific survival not reached (P=0.0002). Cases with MYC rearrangements that overexpressed MYC protein were at risk with respect to disease-specific survival independent of the International Prognostic Index (P=0.046 and P<0.001, respectively). Presence of concurrent BCL2 aberrations but not of BCL6 aberrations was prognostically additive. Radiotherapy seemed to diminish the prognostic effects of MYC rearrangements in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma patients since only 2/10 irradiated patients with MYC rearrangements died of/with disease, compared with 16/28 non-irradiated patients with MYC rearrangements. We conclude that MYC rearrangements add prognostic information for individual risk estimation and such cases might represent a distinct, biologically determined disease subgroup.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24336156 DOI: 10.1038/modpathol.2013.214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mod Pathol ISSN: 0893-3952 Impact factor: 7.842