| Literature DB >> 32693406 |
Ibai Goicoechea1, Noemi Puig2, Maria-Teresa Cedena3, Leire Burgos1, Lourdes Cordón4,5, María-Belén Vidriales2, Juan Flores-Montero6,7,8,9, Norma C Gutierrez2, Maria-Jose Calasanz1, Maria-Luisa Martin Ramos3, David Lara-Astiaso1, Amaia Vilas-Zornoza1, Diego Alignani1, Idoia Rodriguez1, Sarai Sarvide1, Daniel Alameda1, Juan José Garcés1, Sara Rodriguez1, Vicente Fresquet1, Jon Celay1, Ramón Garcia-Sanz2, Joaquin Martinez-Lopez3, Albert Oriol10, Rafael Rios11, Jesus Martin-Sanchez12, Rafael Martinez-Martinez13, Josep Sarra14, Miguel-Teodoro Hernandez15, Javier de la Rubia4,16, Isabel Krsnik17, Jose-Maria Moraleda18, Luis Palomera19, Joan Bargay20, Jose-Angel Martinez-Climent1, Alberto Orfao5, Laura Rosiñol21, Maria-Victoria Mateos2, Juan-José Lahuerta3, Joan Blade21, Jesús San Miguel1, Bruno Paiva1.
Abstract
Patients with multiple myeloma (MM) carrying standard- or high-risk cytogenetic abnormalities (CAs) achieve similar complete response (CR) rates, but the later have inferior progression-free survival (PFS). This questions the legitimacy of CR as a treatment endpoint and represents a biological conundrum regarding the nature of tumor reservoirs that persist after therapy in high-risk MM. We used next-generation flow (NGF) cytometry to evaluate measurable residual disease (MRD) in MM patients with standard- vs high-risk CAs (n = 300 and 90, respectively) enrolled in the PETHEMA/GEM2012MENOS65 trial, and to identify mechanisms that determine MRD resistance in both patient subgroups (n = 40). The 36-month PFS rates were higher than 90% in patients with standard- or high-risk CAs achieving undetectable MRD. Persistent MRD resulted in a median PFS of ∼3 and 2 years in patients with standard- and high-risk CAs, respectively. Further use of NGF to isolate MRD, followed by whole-exome sequencing of paired diagnostic and MRD tumor cells, revealed greater clonal selection in patients with standard-risk CAs, higher genomic instability with acquisition of new mutations in high-risk MM, and no unifying genetic event driving MRD resistance. Conversely, RNA sequencing of diagnostic and MRD tumor cells uncovered the selection of MRD clones with singular transcriptional programs and reactive oxygen species-mediated MRD resistance in high-risk MM. Our study supports undetectable MRD as a treatment endpoint for patients with MM who have high-risk CAs and proposes characterizing MRD clones to understand and overcome MRD resistance. This trial is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01916252.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 32693406 DOI: 10.1182/blood.2020006731
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113