| Literature DB >> 24970933 |
Luca Malcovati1, Elli Papaemmanuil2, Ilaria Ambaglio3, Chiara Elena3, Anna Gallì3, Matteo G Della Porta4, Erica Travaglino3, Daniela Pietra3, Cristiana Pascutto3, Marta Ubezio1, Elisa Bono1, Matteo C Da Vià1, Angela Brisci5, Francesca Bruno5, Laura Cremonesi5, Maurizio Ferrari5, Emanuela Boveri6, Rosangela Invernizzi7, Peter J Campbell2, Mario Cazzola1.
Abstract
Our knowledge of the genetic basis of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and myelodysplastic/myeloproliferative neoplasms (MDS/MPN) has considerably improved. To define genotype/phenotype relationships of clinical relevance, we studied 308 patients with MDS, MDS/MPN, or acute myeloid leukemia evolving from MDS. Unsupervised statistical analysis, including the World Health Organization classification criteria and somatic mutations, showed that MDS associated with SF3B1-mutation (51 of 245 patients, 20.8%) is a distinct nosologic entity irrespective of current morphologic classification criteria. Conversely, MDS with ring sideroblasts with nonmutated SF3B1 segregated in different clusters with other MDS subtypes. Mutations of genes involved in DNA methylation, splicing factors other than SF3B1, and genes of the RAS pathway and cohesin complex were independently associated with multilineage dysplasia and identified a distinct subset (51 of 245 patients, 20.8%). No recurrent mutation pattern correlated with unilineage dysplasia without ring sideroblasts. Irrespective of driver somatic mutations, a threshold of 5% bone marrow blasts retained a significant discriminant value for identifying cases with clonal evolution. Comutation of TET2 and SRSF2 was highly predictive of a myeloid neoplasm characterized by myelodysplasia and monocytosis, including but not limited to, chronic myelomonocytic leukemia. These results serve as a proof of concept that a molecular classification of myeloid neoplasms is feasible.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24970933 PMCID: PMC4148773 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2014-03-560227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113