| Literature DB >> 31974359 |
Aishwarya Ravindran1, Rong He1, Rhett P Ketterling2, Majd D Jawad3, Dong Chen1, Jennifer L Oliveira1, Phuong L Nguyen1, David S Viswanatha1, Kaaren K Reichard1, James D Hoyer1, Ronald S Go3, Min Shi4.
Abstract
Patients with a sole del(20q) chromosomal abnormality and without morphologic features of a myeloid neoplasm (MN) have shown variable clinical outcomes. To explore the potential risk stratification markers in this group of patients, we evaluated their genetic mutational landscape by a 35-gene MN-focused next-generation sequencing (NGS) panel and examined the association of mutations to progression of MNs. Our study included 56 patients over a 10-year period with isolated del(20q), of whom 23 (41.1%) harbored at least one mutation. With a median follow-up of 32.6 months (range: 0.1-159.1), 9 of 23 patients with mutation(s) progressed to MNs, while all 33 patients without mutations did not progress to MN. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis demonstrated the presence of mutation(s) as a significant risk factor for progression to MN (P < 0.0001). MN progression was strongly associated with the presence of non-DNMT3A/TET2/ASXL1 epigenetic modifiers and nonspliceosome mutations (P = 0.003). There was no significant difference among patients with and without MN progression with respect to the number of mutations, variant allele frequency, percentage of del(20q), and other clinical/laboratory variables. This study illustrates the underlying genetic heterogeneity and complexity of isolated del(20q), and underscores the prognostic value of NGS mutational analysis in these cases.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31974359 PMCID: PMC6978416 DOI: 10.1038/s41408-020-0275-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Cancer J ISSN: 2044-5385 Impact factor: 11.037
Fig. 1Flow chart depicting selection of patient cohort with isolated del(20q).
BM bone marrow, MPN myeloproliferative neoplasm, MDS myelodysplastic syndrome, AML acute myeloid leukemia, NGS next-generation sequencing.
Comparison of clinical and laboratory features of patients with isolated del(20q) among those with progression versus without progression to a myeloid neoplasm.
| Variable | Progression to MN | No progression to MN | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | Mean: 69.4 (SD ± 9.8) (range: 55−88) | Mean: 67.6 (SD ± 11.3) (range: 44−90) | 0.66 |
| Sex | Male: 6 (66.7%) Female: 3 (33.3%) | Male: 36 (76.6%) Female: 11 (23.4%) | 0.68 |
| Hemoglobin, g/dL | Mean: 12.3 (SD ± 1.6) (range: 9.3−14.7) | Mean: 11.5 (SD ± 1.7) (range: 8.3−15.1) | 0.20 |
| Absolute neutrophil count, ×109/L | Mean: 3.2 (SD ± 2.5) (range: 0.6−8) | Mean: 3.1 (SD ± 1.6) (range: 0.8−9.4) | 0.88 |
| Platelet count, ×109/L | Mean: 156.9 (SD ± 108.7) (range: 61−392) | Mean: 147 (SD ± 80.3) (range: 16−385) | 0.75 |
| % Del(20q) | Mean: 30.6 (SD ± 29.2) (range: 10−100) | Mean: 39.9 (SD ± 29.3) (range: 6.7−100) | 0.39 |
| Cytotoxic chemotherapy | 7 (77.8%) | 31 (65.9%) | 0.70 |
| Gene mutations ≥ 1 | 9 (100%) (1 Mut: | 14 (29.8%) (1 Mut: | 0.0001 |
MN myeloid neoplasm, Mut mutation.
Fig. 2Summary of pathogenic mutations and clinical outcomes of patients with isolated del(20q).
MNs myeloid neoplasms.
Clinicopathologic features and genetic mutations in isolated del(20q) patients who progressed to myeloid neoplasms.
| Pt# | At initial isolated del(20q) detection | At progression | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age/Sex | Indication | Bone marrow morphology | Mutations detected; (VAF) | Cytogenetics | Myeloid neoplasm progressed | Bone marrow morphology | Mutations detected; (VAF) | Cytogenetics | Time to progression (months) | Time to final follow-up (months) | |
| 1 | 75/M | Staging for primary diffuse large B-cell lymphoma of the CNS | No lymphoma present; Occasional large megakaryocytes | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[10]/46,XY[10] | AML, likely therapy-related | 80% blasts; occasional hypogranular neutrophils; No lymphoma present | 42-43,X,-Y,add(5)(q11.2),-6,-7,add(8)(q22),del(9)(q13q22),add(16)(q22), i(17)(q10),-18, +r[3], +mar[10][cp16]/42,sl,add(11)(q23),add(21)(p11.2)[2]/ 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[2] | 32.8 | 33.5 | ||
| 2 | 70/M | Hairy cell leukemia | Hairy cell leukemia (80−90%) | 46,XX,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[20] | MDS/MPN, unclassifiable | Hairy cell leukemia (10−20%); Hyperlobate and hyperchromatic megakaryocytes forming clusters; ring sideroblasts (10−15%) | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[9]/46,XY[6] | 40.2 | 99.0 | ||
| 3 | 70/M | Pancytopenia | Rare small, monolobate megakaryocytes | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[2]/46,XY[18] | MDS with excess blasts-1 | Trilineage dysplasia and 8% blasts | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[1]/46,XY[19] | 1.9 | 88.0 | ||
| 4 | 73/F | Chronic neutropenia, thrombocytopenia | Rare hypogranular neutrophils; rare hypolobate/bilobate megakaryocytes | 46,XX,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[2]/46,XX[18] | MDS w/multilineage dysplasia | Trilineage dysplasia | 46,XX,ider(20)(p11.1)del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[12]/46,XX,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[5]/46,XX[3] | 53.9 | 54.3 | ||
| 5 | 58/M | Multiple myeloma follow-up | No plasma cell neoplasm; rare atypical small megakaryocytes and <1% ringed sideroblasts | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.1)[8]/46,XY[12] | MDS with excess blasts-1 | Plasma cell neoplasm (50−60%); mild erythroid dysplasia megakaryocytic dysplasia and 7% blasts | ND | 45,XY,-3,i(4)(q10),add(5)(q11.2)[cp11]/46,idem, +mar[8]/46,XY[1] | 57.4 | 64.3 | |
| 6 | 65/F | Multiple myeloma follow-up | No plasma cell neoplasm; rare atypical megakaryocytes with large and hyperlobate nuclei | 46,XX,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[3]/46,XX[17] | MDS, unclassifiable | Plasma cell neoplasm (20−30%) dysmegakaryopoiesis | ND | 46,XX,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[4]/46,XX[16] | 36.7 | 45.4 | |
| 7 | 88/M | Idiopathic immune thrombocytopenia | Normal marrow | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.1)[2]/46,XY[18] | AML | 25% marrow blasts; 4% circulating blasts. | 46. XY [20] | 50.6 | 56.9 | ||
| 8 | 74/F | CLL with thrombocytopenia | No CLL present; Slightly hypercellular marrow. | 46,XX,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[20] | MDS-unclassifiable | NAb | ND | ND | 3.5 | 5.8 | |
| 9 | 55/M | Multiple myeloma follow-up | No plasma cell neoplasm present; Slightly hypercellular bone marrow | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.1)[6]/46,XY[15] | MDS/MPN, unclassifiable | No plasma cell neoplasm present; Hypercellular (70%) marrow with dyserythropoiesis, dysmegakaryopoiesis with numerous large atypical forms forming loose clusters | ND | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.1)[5]/46,idem,add(12)(p11.2)[11]/46,XY,t(1;19)(q12;p13.3)[3]/46,XY[1] | 32.4 | 46.9 | |
AML acute myeloid leukemia, CLL chronic lymphocytic leukemia, CMN chronic myeloid neoplasm, CNS central nervous system, ND not done, NHL non-Hodgkin lymphoma, MDS myelodysplastic syndrome, NA not available, VAF variant allele frequency, VUS variant of unknown significance.
aPatient #2 BRAF V600E mutation was attributable to the patient’s known hairy cell leukemia. This mutation was excluded from analysis.
bPatient #8 had a bone marrow biopsy performed at an outside facility and was not available to review the morphology at the time of progression.
Genetic mutations in patients who did not progress to myeloid neoplasms.
| No | Age/Sex | Indication for bone marrow biopsy (% primary disease involvement) | Cytogenetics at initial isolated del(20q) detection | Mutations detected; (VAF) | Time to final follow-up (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 90/M | Anemia, thrombocytopenia | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[7]/45,X,-Y[4]/46,XY[9] | 47.3 | |
| 2 | 82/M | Pancytopenia | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[6]/46,XY[14] | 40.9 | |
| 3 | 82/M | Pancytopenia with macrocytosis | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[8]/46,XY[12] | 27.0 | |
| 4 | 70/M | Multiple myeloma follow-up (No plasma cell neoplasm) | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[2]/46,XY[28] | First NGS: Second NGS: (at 71.8 months from 1st NGS) | 82.7 |
| 5 | 61/M | Mantle cell lymphoma follow-up (No lymphoma present) | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.1)[13]/46,XY[7] | 64.4 | |
| 6 | 76/M | Pancytopenia | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.1)[2]/45,X,-Y[8]/46,XY[10] | 8.4 | |
| 7 | 76/M | Thrombocytopenia and monoclonal gammopathy (Plasma cell neoplasm < 5%) | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[20] | 0.1 | |
| 8 | 81/M | Monoclonal gammopathy (No plasma cell neoplasm present) | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[6]/46,XY[14] | 24.3 | |
| 9 | 58/M | CLL (20% CLL) | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.1)[9]/46,XY[11] | 7.5 | |
| 10 | 71/M | Staging for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (No lymphoma present) | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[4]/46,XY[16] | 0.9 | |
| 11 | 68/M | Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma follow-up (No lymphoma present) | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.1)[20] | 25.6 | |
| 12 | 85/M | High-grade B-cell lymphoma NOS follow-up (No lymphoma present) | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[6]/46,XY[14] | 0.2 | |
| 13 | 51/F | Progressive thrombocytopenia status-post temozolomide therapy for leiomyosarcoma | 46,XX,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[4]/46,XX[16] | 21.7 | |
| 14 | 56/M | Multiple myeloma follow-up (10% plasma cell neoplasm) | 46,XY,del(20)(q11.2q13.3)[6]/46,XY[14] | 40.2 |
CLL chronic lymphocytic leukemia, VAF variant allele frequency.
Fig. 3Kaplan−Meier analysis of time to progression among patients with isolated del(20q).
a The time to progression and/or death among patients with mutation(s) (red) was 32.8 months and among those without mutation (blue) was 50.5 months (Log-rank P = 0.03). b Patients with mutation(s) (red) had a significantly higher risk of progression to a myeloid neoplasm in comparison to those without mutation (blue) (Log-rank P < 0.0001). c There was no significant difference in progression to a myeloid neoplasm among patients with one mutation (red) versus >1 mutations (green) (Log-rank P = 0.74).