| Literature DB >> 34275438 |
Marijana Nesic1,2, Mads Sønderkær1,3,4, Rasmus Froberg Brøndum2,3, Tarec Christoffer El-Galaly1,2,3, Inge Søkilde Pedersen2,3,4, Martin Bøgsted1,2,3, Karen Dybkær5,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most frequent lymphoid neoplasm among adults,and approximately 30-40% of patients will experience relapse while 5-10% will suffer from primary refractory disease caused by different mechanisms, including treatment-induced resistance. For refractory and relapsed DLBCL (rrDLBCL) patients, early detection and understanding of the mechanisms controlling treatment resistance are of great importance to guide therapy decisions. Here, we have focused on genetic variations in immune surveillance genes in diagnostic DLBCL (dDLBCL) and rrDLBCL patients to elaborate on the suitability of new promising immunotherapies.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnostic DLBCL; Gene; Immune surveillance; Immunotherapy; MHC class I; MHC class II; Refractory/relapsed DLBCL; Somatic mutations
Year: 2021 PMID: 34275438 PMCID: PMC8286604 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-021-08556-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Clinical characteristics of the diagnostic and refractory/relapsed cohort. Clinical parameters at age of diagnosis
FFisher’s exact test, WWilcoxon rank-sum test, n, number of patients; NA not available
Clinical characteristics of the diagnostic and refractory/relapsed cohort. Cell-of-origin classification at the time of diagnosis and the relapse
FFisher's exact test, n, number of patients
Fig. 1Mutational portrait of 36 immune surveillance genes in dDLBCL vs. rrDLBCL. The figure’s left side presents the immune surveillance genes in DLBCL, with gene mutation frequencies depicted on the right side calculated by including patients that do not harbor mutations in immune surveillance genes. Genes are sorted by the most frequently mutated genes in rrDLBCL. Samples that have circles on the last N. A row are samples that are not muatated by immune surveillance related genes. The circles’ size represents the number of specific mutations, while different colors present types of mutations. No individual genes are significantly different in gene mutation frequency between dDLBCLs and rrDLBCL tested by Fisher’s exact test. Also, we did not detect mutations in PDL1 and CTLA-4 genes
Fig. 2Gene mutation frequency for 36 immune surveillance genes differs between diagnostic (35 affected genes) and refractory/relapsed (11 affected genes) DLBCL patients. The Wilcoxon rank-sum test obtained the adjusted p-value
Fig. 3The mutational pattern of genes affecting antigene-presentation and immune suppression and exhaustion in dDLBCLs and rrDLBCLs. The blue dots represent mutations in diagnostic (dDLBCLs) patients, and red dots in refractory/relapsed patients (rrDLBCLs); the dots’ size represents the number of variants in a specific gene in the patient range (1–8). On the left side are genes representing sub group detected in our cohort. On the top are named cohorts
Fig. 4Exploration of genetic mutations in matched diagnostic and relapsed tumor biopsies of DLBCL patients. Variant allele frequency is displayed with the line as a percentage of each somatic coding mutation before and after treatment, showing possible clonal expansion; genes with additional letters (a-d) in brackets depict different mutations in the same genes
Fig. 5Gene mutation frequencies in the external diagnostic cohort (dDLBCLS) (Chapuy et al. n = 135) compared to merged refractory relapsed cohorts Morin et al. and Greenwalt et al. (n = 72) (rrDLBCLs)