| Literature DB >> 29296819 |
Jay Y Spiegel1, Caroline McNamara2, James A Kennedy2, Tony Panzarella3, Andrea Arruda2, Tracy Stockley4, Mahadeo Sukhai4, Mariam Thomas4, Justyna Bartoszko1, Jenny Ho2, Nancy Siddiq2, Dawn Maze2, Aaron Schimmer2, Andre Schuh2, Hassan Sibai2, Karen Yee2, Jamie Claudio2, Rebecca Devlin2, Mark D Minden2, Suzanne Kamel-Reid4, Vikas Gupta2.
Abstract
In myelofibrosis (MF), driver mutations in JAK2, MPL, or CALR impact survival and progression to blast phase, with the greatest risk conferred by triple-negative status. Subclonal mutations, including mutations in high-molecular risk (HMR) genes, such as ASXL1, EZH2, IDH1/2, and SRSF2 have also been associated with inferior prognosis. However, data evaluating the impact of next-generation sequencing in MF patients treated with JAK1/2 inhibitors are lacking. Using a 54-gene myeloid panel, we performed targeted sequencing on 100 MF patients treated with ruxolitinib (n = 77) or momelotinib (n = 23) and correlated mutational profiles with treatment outcomes. Ninety-nine patients had at least 1 mutation identified, 46 (46%) had 2 mutations, and 34 (34%) patients had ≥3 mutations. Seventy-nine patients carried a mutation in JAK2V617F, 14 patients had mutations in CALR, 6 patients had an MPL mutation, and 2 patients were triple negative. No mutation was significantly associated with spleen or anemia response. A high Dynamic International Prognostic Scoring System score and pretreatment transfusion dependence were associated with a shorter time to treatment failure (TTF), and this association retained significance on multivariable analysis. Patients with ASXL1 (hazard ratio [HR], 1.86; P = .03) and EZH2 mutations (HR, 2.94; P = .009) and an HMR profile (HR, 2.06; P = .01) had shorter TTF. On multivariate analysis, ASXL1 or EZH2 mutations were independently associated with shorter TTF and overall survival. These findings help identify patients unlikely to have a durable response with current JAK1/2 inhibitors and provide a framework for future studies.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29296819 PMCID: PMC5728340 DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2017009530
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Adv ISSN: 2473-9529