| Literature DB >> 25794135 |
E H Rustad1, H Y Dai2, H Hov3, E Coward4, V Beisvag5, O Myklebost6, E Hovig7, S Nakken6, D Vodák8, L A Meza-Zepeda9, A K Sandvik10, K F Wader11, K Misund1, A Sundan1, H Aarset2, A Waage12.
Abstract
In this study, we analyzed the prevalence and clone size of BRAF V600E mutation in 209 patients with multiple myeloma and related the results to clinical phenotype, response and survival. Biopsies were screened for BRAF V600E by allele-specific real-time PCR (AS-PCR). Positive results were confirmed by immunohistochemistry, Sanger sequencing and, in three patients from whom we had stored purified myeloma cells, whole-exome sequencing. Eleven patients (5.3%) were BRAF V600E mutation positive by AS-PCR and at least one other method. The fraction of mutated cells varied from 4 to 100%. BRAF V600E-positive patients had no characteristic clinical phenotype except for significantly higher levels of serum creatinine (125 versus 86 μmol/l) Seven of eleven patients responded with at least very good partial response to alkylators, immunomodulatory agents or proteasome inhibitors. Progression-free and overall survival were similar in patients with and without the mutation. By this integrated approach, we found that patients with BRAF V600E mutation responded very well to broad acting drugs and there was no relation to prognosis in early-stage myeloma. In particular, a large mutated cell fraction did not correlate with aggressive disease.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25794135 PMCID: PMC4382665 DOI: 10.1038/bcj.2015.24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Cancer J ISSN: 2044-5385 Impact factor: 11.037
Analysis of 11 patients with BRAF V600E
| 1 | 75–100 | 86 | Pos | 0 | 48 | VGPR | MP | |
| 1 | ND | 28 | ND | 0 | 48 | VGPR | MP | |
| 2 | 75–100 | ND | Neg | ND | 77 | PR | CP | MP, T, BP, LP |
| 3 | 75–100 | ND | Pos | ND | 89 | CR | MPT, TD, T | |
| 4 | 50–75 | ND | Pos | ND | 11 | Missing data | Missing data | Missing data |
| 5 | 50–75 | ND | Pos | ND | 51 | nCR | MPT, BD, MPB, LD | |
| 6 | 25–50 | ND | Neg | ND | 79 | VGPR | CD+HDSCT, BD+HDSCT | CBD, L, T |
| 7 | 25–50 | ND | Neg | ND | 23 | PR | MP, LD | MPT |
| 8 | <25 | 0 | Neg | KRAS p.Q61H, 10 % | 17 | VGPR | CBD+HDSCT | |
| 9 | <25 | ND | Pos | ND | 0 | Missing data | Missing data | Missing data |
| 10 | <25 | ND | Pos | ND | 238* | nCR | VAD, VAD+HDSCT, CD, BD, CBD | M2 (M, C, P, V, karmustine) |
| 11 | neg | 4 | Neg | NRAS p.Q61K, 94 % | 16 | VGPR | MPT, T | None |
Abbreviations: A, adriamycine; B, bortezomib; C, cyclophosphamide; D, dexamethasone; HDSCT, high-dose therapy and autologous stem cell transplant; L, lenalidomide; M, melphalan; nCR, near CR (CR not confirmed by bone marrow aspiration); ND, not determined; Neg, negative; Pos, positive; P, prednisone; T, thalidomide; V, vincristine.
All biopsies were from bone marrow with the exception of that from patient 3, which was from an osteolytic lesion in the skull. Biopsies were from relapsed disease for patients 6 and 10, and at time of diagnosis for the remaining patients. Results from IHC are reported as the estimated percentage of CD138 or kappa/lambda-positive cells that are also positive for BRAF V600E.
Bone marrow aspirate obtained after treatment for first relapse.
Overall survival is calculated from diagnosis to death (*) or censoring date.
Figure 1IHC showing fraction and growth pattern of BRAF V600E mutated plasma cells. Microscopic images of bone marrow biopsy from patient 4 (Table 1). (a) The bone marrow was in large areas packed with CD138-positive myeloma cells. × 100 magnification. (b) The same area as in a with the BRAF V600E antibody. On the left side, almost none of the myeloma cells were positive, whereas the mutant clone predominated on the right side. × 100 magnification. (c and d) High-power field ( × 400) images from the area to the left (c) and right (d) side in image a and b. (c) Single scattered BRAF V600E-positive myeloma cells among predominating negative myeloma cells. In d, almost all myeloma cells were BRAF V600E positive.
Clinical characteristics of patients with or without BRAF V600E mutation
| P | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age at diagnosis | 69 (27) | 68 (18) | 0.896 |
| Sex (male) | 6/11 (54.5%) | 126/198 (64.6%) | 0.538 |
| Light chain disease | 3/11 (27.3%) | 32/187 (17.1%) | 0.888 |
| Non-secretory | 0/11 | 3/187 (1.6%) | |
| IgG | 5/11 (45.5%) | 96/187 (51.3%) | |
| IgA | 3/11 (27.3%) | 46/187 (24.6%) | |
| IgD | 0/11 | 6/187 (3.2%) | |
| IgE | 0/11 | 1/187 (0.5%) | |
| IgM | 0/11 | 3/187 (1.6%) | |
| Non-secretory | 0/11 | 3/174 (1.7%) | 0.375 |
| Kappa | 5/11 (45.5%) | 112/174 (64.4%) | |
| Lambda | 6/11 (54.5%) | 59/174 (33.9%) | |
| ISS stage 1 | 2/7 (28.6%) | 40/141 (28.4%) | 0.891 |
| ISS stage 2 | 2/7 (28.6%) | 54/141 (38.3%) | |
| ISS stage 3 | 3/7 (42.9.%) | 47/141 (33.3%) | |
| S-creatinine, μmol/l | 125 (463) | 86 (48) | 0.023 |
| Corrected calcium, mmol/l | 2.52 (0.26) | 2.48 (0.37) | 0.878 |
| Hemoglobin, g/dl | 11.9 (2.4) | 11.0 (2.1) | 0.257 |
| Albumin, g/l | 38.0 (10) | 35.0 (8) | 0.512 |
| Beta-2-microglobulin, mg/l | 5.0 (5.4) | 4.2 (4.0) | 0.907 |
| Bone disease present | 9/10 (90%) | 105/131 (80.2%) | 0.687 |
| EMD | 4/11 (36.4%) | 72/167 (43.1%) | 1 |
| EMD separate from bone | 1/11 (9.1%) | 25/167 (15.0%) | 1 |
| Treated with novel drugs | 9/10 (90%) | 133/178 (74.7%) | 0.455 |
| Treated with HDSCT | 3/11 (27%) | 72/184 (39%) | 0.749 |
Abbreviations: EMD, extra medullary disease; HDSCT, high-dose therapy and autologous stem cell transplant.
Parameters who do not follow a normal distribution are presented as median with interquartile range.
Parameters with a normal distribution are presented with mean and standard deviation.
Novel drugs include thalidomide, bortezomib, lenalidomide, carfilzomib.
Summary of WES from three patients positive for BRAF V600E by PCR
| Total single nucleotide variants in exons | 145 | 75 | 74 |
| Synonymous mutations | 33 | 12 | 14 |
| Missense mutations | 75 | 36 | 41 |
| Nonsense mutations | 4 | 4 | 1 |
| Mutation in untranslated region | 24 | 16 | 13 |
| Mutations in splice sites | 9 | 7 | 5 |
| Detection of BRAF V600E mutation | Mutation present in 68/157 reads (43%) | Mutation present in 0/100 reads | Mutation present in 2/99 reads (2%) |
| Estimated BRAF V600E clone size | 86% | 0% | 4% |
| Detection of RAS-mutations | None detected | KRAS Q61H mutation present in 7/146 reads (5%) | NRAS Q61K mutation present in 97/205 reads (47%) |
| Estimated RAS-mutated clone size | 0% | 10% | 94% |
The percentages of mutated tumor cells are estimated given that each cell contains one copy of the mutated gene and that purity of isolated tumor cells is near 100%.
Figure 2Overall survival in patients with and without BRAF V600E mutation shown by Kaplan–Meier plot.