| Literature DB >> 33255665 |
Noemí Muñoz-García1,2, María Jara-Acevedo1,2, Carolina Caldas1,2, Paloma Bárcena1,2, Antonio López1,2, Noemí Puig2,3, Miguel Alcoceba2,3, Paula Fernández4, Neus Villamor2,5, Juan A Flores-Montero1,2, Karoll Gómez6, María Angelina Lemes7, Jose Carlos Hernández8, Iván Álvarez-Twose2,9, Jose Luis Guerra10, Marcos González2,3,11, Alberto Orfao1,2, Julia Almeida1,2.
Abstract
STAT3 and STAT5B (STAT3/STAT5B) mutations are the most common mutations in T-cell large granular lymphocytic leukemia (T-LGLL) and chronic lymphoproliferative disorders of NK cells (CLPD-NK), but their clinical impact remains unknown. We investigated the frequency and type of STAT3/STAT5B mutations in FACS-sorted populations of expanded T/NK-LGL from 100 (82 clonal; 6 oligoclonal; 12 polyclonal) patients, and its relationship with disease features. Seventeen non-LGL T-CLPD patients and 628 age-matched healthy donors were analyzed as controls. STAT3 (n = 30) and STAT5B (n = 1) mutations were detected in 28/82 clonal T/NK-LGLL patients (34%), while absent (0/18, 0%) among oligoclonal/polyclonal LGL-lymphocytosis. Mutations were found across all diagnostic subgroups: TCD8+-LGLL, 36%; CLPD-NK, 38%; TCD4+-LGLL, 7%; Tαβ+DP-LGLL, 100%; Tαβ+DN-LGLL, 50%; Tγδ+-LGLL, 44%. STAT3-mutated T-LGLL/CLPD-NK showed overall reduced (p < 0.05) blood counts of most normal leukocyte subsets, with a higher rate (vs. nonmutated LGLL) of neutropenia (p = 0.04), severe neutropenia (p = 0.02), and cases requiring treatment (p = 0.0001), together with a shorter time-to-therapy (p = 0.0001), particularly in non-Y640F STAT3-mutated patients. These findings confirm and extend on previous observations about the high prevalence of STAT3 mutations across different subtypes of LGLL, and its association with a more marked decrease of all major blood-cell subsets and a shortened time-to-therapy.Entities:
Keywords: STAT3 and STAT5B mutations; T and NK cells; large granular lymphocytic leukemia; neutropenia; normal leukocyte subsets
Year: 2020 PMID: 33255665 PMCID: PMC7760806 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12123508
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639