| Literature DB >> 27226433 |
Carmen Diana Herling1, Marion Klaumünzer1, Cristiano Krings Rocha1, Janine Altmüller2, Holger Thiele2, Jasmin Bahlo1, Sandra Kluth1, Giuliano Crispatzu3, Marco Herling3, Joanna Schiller1, Anja Engelke1, Eugen Tausch4, Hartmut Döhner4, Kirsten Fischer1, Valentin Goede1, Peter Nürnberg5, Hans Christian Reinhardt3, Stephan Stilgenbauer4, Michael Hallek3, Karl-Anton Kreuzer1.
Abstract
Genetic instability is a feature of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) with adverse prognosis. We hypothesized that chromosomal translocations or complex karyotypes and distinct somatic mutations may impact outcome after first-line chemoimmunotherapy of CLL patients. We performed metaphase karyotyping and next-generation sequencing (NGS) of 85 genes in pretreatment blood samples obtained from 161 patients registered for CLL11, a 3-arm phase 3 trial comparing frontline chlorambucil (Clb) vs Clb plus rituximab (Clb-R) or Clb plus obinutuzumab in CLL patients with significant comorbidity. Chromosomal aberrations as assessed by karyotyping were observed in 68.8% of 154 patients, 31.2% carried translocations, and 19.5% showed complex karyotypes. NGS revealed 198 missense/nonsense mutations and 76 small indels in 76.4% of patients. The most frequently mutated genes were NOTCH1, SF3B1, ATM, TP53, BIRC3, POT1, XPO1, and KRAS Sole chemotherapy, treatment with Clb-R, or genetic lesions in TP53 (9.9% of patients) and KRAS (6.2% of patients) were significantly associated with nonresponse to study therapy. In multivariate models, complex karyotypes and POT1 mutations (8.1% of patients) represented significant prognostic factors for an unfavorable survival, independently of IGHV mutation status, Binet stage, and serum β-2-microglobuline. Patients with the copresence of complex karyotypes and deletions/mutations involving TP53 demonstrated a particularly short survival. In summary, this is the first prospective, controlled study in CLL patients that shows a role of complex karyotype aberrations as an independent prognostic factor for survival after front-line therapy. Moreover, the study identifies mutations in KRAS and POT1 as novel determinants of outcome after chemoimmunotherapy using chlorambucil and anti-CD20 treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27226433 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2016-01-691550
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113