| Literature DB >> 33929500 |
Michael Heuser1, Bennet Heida1, Konstantin Büttner1, Clara Philine Wienecke1, Katrin Teich1, Carolin Funke1, Maximilian Brandes1, Piroska Klement1, Alessandro Liebich1, Martin Wichmann1, Blerina Neziri1, Anuhar Chaturvedi1, Arnold Kloos1, Konstantinos Mintzas1, Verena I Gaidzik2, Peter Paschka2, Lars Bullinger3, Walter Fiedler4, Albert Heim5, Wolfram Puppe5, Jürgen Krauter6, Konstanze Döhner2, Hartmut Döhner2, Arnold Ganser1, Michael Stadler1, Lothar Hambach1, Razif Gabdoulline1, Felicitas Thol1.
Abstract
Next-generation sequencing (NGS)-based measurable residual disease (MRD) monitoring in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is widely applicable and prognostic prior to allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (alloHCT). We evaluated the prognostic role of clonal hematopoiesis-associated DNMT3A, TET2, and ASXL1 (DTA) and non-DTA mutations for MRD monitoring post-alloHCT to refine MRD marker selection. Of 154 patients with AML, 138 (90%) had at least one mutation at diagnosis, which were retrospectively monitored by amplicon-based error-corrected NGS on day 90 and/or day 180 post-alloHCT. MRD was detected in 34 patients on day 90 and/or day 180 (25%). The rate of MRD positivity was similar when DTA and non-DTA mutations were considered separately (17.6% vs 19.8%). DTA mutations had no prognostic impact on cumulative incidence of relapse, relapse-free survival, or overall survival in our study and were removed from further analysis. In the remaining 131 patients with at least 1 non-DTA mutation, clinical and transplantation-associated characteristics were similarly distributed between MRD-positive and MRD-negative patients. In multivariate analysis, MRD positivity was an independent adverse predictor of cumulative incidence of relapse, relapse-free survival, and overall survival but not of nonrelapse mortality. The prognostic effect was independent of different cutoffs (above limit of detection, 0.1% and 1% variant allele frequency). MRD log-reduction between diagnosis and post-alloHCT assessment had no prognostic value. MRD status post-alloHCT had the strongest impact in patients who were MRD positive prior to alloHCT. In conclusion, non-DTA mutations are prognostic NGS-MRD markers post-alloHCT, whereas the prognostic role of DTA mutations in the posttransplant setting remains open.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33929500 PMCID: PMC8114555 DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2021004367
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Adv ISSN: 2473-9529