| Literature DB >> 34440317 |
Chiara Chiereghin1, Erica Travaglino1, Matteo Zampini1, Elena Saba1, Claudia Saitta1, Elena Riva1, Matteo Bersanelli2, Matteo Giovanni Della Porta1,2.
Abstract
Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are a clonal disease arising from hematopoietic stem cells, that are characterized by ineffective hematopoiesis (leading to peripheral blood cytopenia) and by an increased risk of evolution into acute myeloid leukemia. MDS are driven by a complex combination of genetic mutations that results in heterogeneous clinical phenotype and outcome. Genetic studies have enabled the identification of a set of recurrently mutated genes which are central to the pathogenesis of MDS and can be organized into a limited number of cellular pathways, including RNA splicing (SF3B1, SRSF2, ZRSR2, U2AF1 genes), DNA methylation (TET2, DNMT3A, IDH1/2), transcription regulation (RUNX1), signal transduction (CBL, RAS), DNA repair (TP53), chromatin modification (ASXL1, EZH2), and cohesin complex (STAG2). Few genes are consistently mutated in >10% of patients, whereas a long tail of 40-50 genes are mutated in <5% of cases. At diagnosis, the majority of MDS patients have 2-4 driver mutations and hundreds of background mutations. Reliable genotype/phenotype relationships were described in MDS: SF3B1 mutations are associated with the presence of ring sideroblasts and more recent studies indicate that other splicing mutations (SRSF2, U2AF1) may identify distinct disease categories with specific hematological features. Moreover, gene mutations have been shown to influence the probability of survival and risk of disease progression and mutational status may add significant information to currently available prognostic tools. For instance, SF3B1 mutations are predictors of favourable prognosis, while driver mutations of other genes (such as ASXL1, SRSF2, RUNX1, TP53) are associated with a reduced probability of survival and increased risk of disease progression. In this article, we review the most recent advances in our understanding of the genetic basis of myelodysplastic syndromes and discuss its clinical relevance.Entities:
Keywords: disease classification; gene mutations; myelodysplastic syndrome; prognosis
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34440317 PMCID: PMC8392119 DOI: 10.3390/genes12081144
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Molecular classification of myelodysplastic syndromes. MDS del(5q), MDS with isolated deletion of long arm of chromosome 5; MDS-SLD, MDS with single lineage dysplasia; MDS-MLD, MDS with multilineage dysplasia; MDS-RS-SLD, MDS with ring sideroblasts and single lineage dysplasia; MDS-RS-MLD, MDS with ring sideroblasts and multilineage dysplasia; MDS-EB1, MDS with excess of blasts, type 1; MDS-EB2, MDS with excess of blasts, type 2.
| Genomic-Based MDS Category | Clinical and Hematological Features | WHO 2016 MDS Categories | Prognosis | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MDS associated with splicing gene mutations | MDS with isolated | - Peripheral blood: isolated anemia, normal to high platelet count | MDS-RS-SLD; | Very good prognosis | |
| MDS with | - Peripheral blood: anemia, mild neutropenia, thrombocytopenia | MDS-RS-MLD, | Good prognosis (less favourable as compared to MDS with isolated | ||
| MDS with | - Peripheral blood: single cytopenia (anemia in most cases), higher monocyte absolute count | MDS-MLD, | Worse prognosis with respect to | ||
| MDS with | - Peripheral blood: two or more cytopenias | MDS-EB2 | Poor prognosis (Worse prognosis with respect to MDS with | ||
| MDS with | - Peripheral blood: severe transfusion-dependent anemia | MDS-MLD, | Poor prognosis | ||
| MDS with | - Peripheral blood: two or more cytopenias with transfusion-dependency | MDS-EB1, | Very poor prognosis, high rate of leukemic evolution | ||
| MDS with AML-like mutations ( | - Peripheral blood: two or more cytopenias with transfusion dependency | MDS-EB1, | Poor prognosis, high rate of leukemic evolution | ||
| MDS without specific genomic profiles | - Peripheral blood: asympotmatic anemia | MDS-SLD; | Good prognosis | ||
| MDS del(5q) | MDS with isolated 5q, with none or one mutation (excluding | - Peripheral blood: mild anemia without transfusion dependency | MDS del(5q) | Good prognosis | |
| MDS with isolated 5q with two or more mutations or | - Peripheral blood: mild anemia | MDS del(5q) | Worse prognosis and higher rate of leukemic evolution with respect to MDS del(5q) with none or one mutation |