| Literature DB >> 28422716 |
Chiara Cavalloni1, Elisa Rumi1,2, Virginia V Ferretti2, Daniela Pietra2, Elisa Roncoroni2, Marta Bellini1, Michele Ciboddo1, Ilaria C Casetti1, Benedetta Landini2, Elena Fugazza2, Daniela Troletti2, Cesare Astori2, Mario Cazzola1,2.
Abstract
We investigated the variation of CALR-mutant burden during follow-up in 105 CALR-mutant MPN and compared it to the variation of JAK2-mutant burden in 226 JAK2-mutant MPN.The median allele burden at last evaluation was significantly higher than at first evaluation in essential thrombocythemia (ET) (49.5% vs 45%, P < .001) but not in primary myelofibrosis (PMF) (52% vs 51%, P 0.398). Median values of slope were positive both in ET (0.071) and in PMF (0.032). In CALR-mutant ET there was a difference between natural and therapy-related slope (P 0.006).In the JAK2-mutated cohort, the median allele burden at last evaluation was not different respect to that at first evaluation, neither in ET (22.9% vs 23.2%, P = 0.216) nor in PMF (50.5% vs 45.0%, P = 0.809), despite a positive slope. Multivariate analysis to evaluate the effect of mutation (CALR vs JAK2) on the slope of mutant burden in not treated pts with a positive slope adjusting for diagnosis (ET vs PMF) showed a trend toward a higher increase of mutant burden in CALR vs JAK2 (β = 0.19, P = 0.061) with no difference between diagnosis (P = 0.419). The findings of this study suggest that clonal expansion in CALR-mutant MPN is faster than that observed in JAK2-mutant MPN.Entities:
Keywords: CALR; JAK2; burden; myeloproliferative; sequential
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28422716 PMCID: PMC5464878 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.16797
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1CALR allele burden
CALR allele burden (%) at first and last evaluation in patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET) and primary myelofibrosis (PMF).
Figure 2Scatter plot of Delta CALR according to Delta time
The Delta CALR (difference between last and first CALR allele burden evaluation) according to Delta time (time between last and first evaluation) in ET (grey dots) and PMF (black dots). In PMF patients the Delta CALR does not significantly change with the increasing of interval time between first and last evaluation (beta = −0.01 P = .866); in ET patients the Delta CALR increases (with borderline significance) with the increasing of interval time between first and last evaluation (beta = 0.08 P = .074).
Figure 3Slope of the CALR allele burden
Slope of CALR mutant alleles between sequential evaluations in patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET) and primary myelofibrosis (PMF). The left box-plot shows the natural slope obtained in patients who did not receive cytoreduction; the right box-plot shows the therapy-related slope obtained in patients who receive a myelosuppression. Mann Whitney U test showed a difference between natural and therapy-related slope in ET (P 0.006) but not in PMF (P 0.451) One treated PMF outlier patient (−5.526) was not represented for graphic reasons.
Figure 4Effect of the mutational status on the slope of mutant burden
Multivariate regression with slope as outcome and mutation and diagnosis as covariates. The analysis was carried on the subgroup of patients with essential thrombocythemia (ET) and primary myelofibrosis (PMF) who were untreated to avoid the potential influence of cytoreduction. There was a trend toward a higher increase of mutant burden in CALR vs JAK2 (β = 0.19, P = 0.061) with no difference between diagnosis (P = 0.419).
Clinical characteristics of the 105 CALR-mutated patients and 226 JAK2-mutated patients
| ET ( | PMF ( | ET ( | PMF ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median age at first evaluation, years (range) | 45 (15–77) | 46 (18–75) | 46 (15–83) | 58 (27–82) |
| Gender, M/F (%) | 42/34 (55%/45%) | 12/17 (41%/59%) | 70/113 (38%/62%) | 28/15 (65%/35%) |
| Median follow-up, years (range) | 8.73 (1.07–25.76) | 8.16 (0.71–16.67) | 9.33 (1.03–28.97) | 6.69 (0.84–18.43) |
| Median interval between first-last sample, months (interquartile range) | 45.5 (21.4–91) | 39.6 (17.7–78.2) | 51.2 (27.3–88.8) | 33.0 (17.7–49.0) |
| Median number of blood samples per patient (range) | 2 (2–9) | 2 (2–6) | 2 (2–11) | 2 (2–8) |