| Literature DB >> 35326746 |
Elizabeta A Rojas1,2, Norma C Gutiérrez1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Plasma cell leukemia (PCL) is a rare and highly aggressive plasma cell dyscrasia characterized by the presence of clonal circulating plasma cells in peripheral blood. PCL accounts for approximately 2-4% of all multiple myeloma (MM) cases. PCL can be classified in primary PCL (pPCL) when it appears de novo and in secondary PCL (sPCL) when it arises from a pre-existing relapsed/refractory MM. Despite the improvement in treatment modalities, the prognosis remains very poor. There is growing evidence that pPCL is a different clinicopathological entity as compared to MM, although the mechanisms underlying its pathogenesis are not fully elucidated. The development of new high-throughput technologies, such as microarrays and new generation sequencing (NGS), has contributed to a better understanding of the peculiar biological and clinical features of this disease. Relevant information is now available on cytogenetic alterations, genetic variants, transcriptome, methylation patterns, and non-coding RNA profiles. Additionally, attempts have been made to integrate genomic alterations with gene expression data. However, given the low frequency of PCL, most of the genetic information comes from retrospective studies with a small number of patients, sometimes leading to inconsistent results.Entities:
Keywords: PCL; genetics; multiple myeloma; mutations; plasma cell leukemia; primary and secondary PCL; transcriptome
Year: 2022 PMID: 35326746 PMCID: PMC8946729 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14061594
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Summary of the most relevant genomic studies carried out in PCL.
| Study/Reference | Number of Patients | Methodologies | Summary of Results * |
|---|---|---|---|
| 14 pPCL/127 MM | FISH | ||
| 26 pPCL/664 MM | Cell DNA content, immunophenotypic studies, FISH | Numeric abnormalities in 92% pPCL. DNA content: diploid in 85% pPCL. | |
| 40 pPCL/247 MM | FISH, conventional karyotyping | Higher proportion of t(11;14), t(14;16), and hypodiploid karyotype in pPCL. | |
| 5 pPCL/25 MM | CGH | Losses of chromosomal material significantly more frequent in pPCL. | |
| 10 pPCL/3 sPCL/33 MM/6 MGUS/2 SMM/11 MM at relapse | Allele-specific PCR amplification and | ||
| 46 pPCL/147 MGUS/39 SMM/669 MM | FISH | Higher proportion of t(11;14), t(14;16), and 13q deletions in pPCL. | |
| 41 pPCL/39 sPCL/439 MM | FISH, conventional karyotyping, methylation-sensitive PCR, | t(11;14) significantly more frequent in pPCL than in sPCL. High proportion of del(17p), | |
| 15 pPCL/26 sPCL/220 MM | cIg-FISH, FISH | del(13q), del (17p), t(4;14), 1q21 amplification and del(1p21) significantly more common in PCL than in MM. t(4;14) and del(1p21) associated with shorter OS. In multivariant analysis, t(4;14) remained a significant predictor for adverse OS in PCL. | |
| 10 pPCL/2 sPCL/861 MM | FISH, conventional karyotyping, aCGH, qRT-PCR | t(11;14) and t(14;16) significantly more frequent in PCL. Structural and numerical abnormalities frequently involve 8q24. | |
| 73 pPCL (41 FISH), 53 sPCL | Conventional karyotyping ( | Unfavorable cytogenetics: 56%. | |
| 13 pPCL/19 sPCL/1018 MM | GEP, FISH | GEP analyses distinguished pPCL from MM based on 203 gene probes. | |
| 18 pPCL | FISH, GEP, SNP arrays, miRNA microarrays | 83 deregulated miRNAs in pPCL compared to MM. Expression levels of miR-497, miR-106b, miR-181a, and miR-181b correlated with treatment response, and of miR-92a, miR-330-3p, miR-22, and miR-146a correlated with clinical outcome. | |
| 23 pPCL | FISH, SNP array, and GEP | Predominance of t(11;14) (40%) and t(14;16) (30%) Absence of activating mutations of | |
| 21 pPCL/55 MM | GEP | 503-gene transcriptional signature distinguishes pPCL from MM. Underexpression of | |
| 12 pPCL | WES | First study of mutational pattern in pPCL patients using WES. Identification of 14 candidate cancer driver genes, mainly involved in cell cycle, genome stability, RNA metabolism, and protein folding. | |
| 24 pPCL/11 sPCL/132 MM | Targeted NGS for | ||
| 24 pPCL/12 sPCL/170 MM/33 SMM/20 MGUS/9 NPC | lncRNA expression profiling by arrays | 15 lncRNAs progressively increased, and six decreased from normal PCs to MGUS, SMM, MM, and PCL samples. | |
| 12 pPCL/10 sPCL/129 MM | Targeted NGS for | ||
| 14 pPCL/60 MM/5 MGUS | Global methylation patterns by high-density arrays | Global hypomethylation profile in pPCL. Decreasing methylation levels from MGUS to MM and pPCL. | |
| 9 pPCL/ 10 MM | Transcriptome arrays | Different transcriptome profiles between pPCL and MM carrying del(17p). RNA splicing machinery was one of the most deregulated processes in pPCL. | |
| 46 pPCL | Conventional karyotyping ( | Predominance of del(13q) (38%), 1q gains (30%), del(17p) (27%), and t(11;14) (24%). t(4;14): not found. | |
| 23 pPCL/1273 MM | FISH, WES, and GEP | Predominance of complex structural changes and high-risk mutational patterns in pPCL. Driver genes with more mutations in pPCL than in MM: | |
| 68 pPCL (defined by ≥5% of clonal circulating PC) | FISH ( | Predominance of t(11;14) (47%), del(17p) (28%) and t(14;16) (12%). | |
| 15 pPCL/50 MM | GEP, FISH | Different transcriptome profiles between pPCL and MM carrying t(11;14). | |
| 12 pPCL/11 sPCL/34 MM | lncRNA expression profile by NGS. Validation with qRT-PCR | 13 deregulated lncRNAs between PCL and MM. Downregulation of LY86-AS1 and VIM-AS1 in PCL compared to MM. | |
| 25 pPCL/19 sPCL/965 MM | FISH and NGF | Distinct cytogenetic profile between pPCL and sPCL, predominantly more del(13q) (95%) and del(17p) (68%) in sPCL than in pPCL, but t(11;14) only detected in pPCL and MM cases, and significantly higher incidence of 8q24 rearrangements in pPCL (40%) compared to sPCL (26%) and MM (9%). | |
| 96 pPCL/907 MM | Targeted NGS, RNA-seq, and FISH |
FISH—fluorescence in situ hybridization; CGH—comparative genomic hybridization; aCGH—comparative genome hybridization arrays; NGS—next-generation sequencing; WES—whole-exome sequencing; SNP—single nucleotide polymorphism; GEP—gene expression profiling by microarrays; cIg-FISH—Cytoplasm light chain immunofluorescence with simultaneous interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization; qRT-PCR—quantitative real-time PCR; OS—overall survival; NGF—next-generation flow cytometry. * Only results related to genetic/genomic alterations are summarized.
Figure 1Genomic abnormalities of primary plasma cell leukemia (pPCL). The updated consensus of the IMWG defines pPCL by the presence of 5% or more circulating plasma cells in peripheral blood. Cytogenetic studies by FISH show predominance of monosomy and deletions of chromosome 13, t(11;14), del(17p), gain/amp(1q) and del(1p). Mutation studies by conventional DNA sequencing, WES, and targeted NGS detect a high frequency of mutations in TP53 and K/NRAS genes. The amino acids most frequently mutated in TP53 are I195, R273, P278, R248, and E285. Activating mutations of K/NRAS most frequently found in pPCL patients affect codons 12, 13, and 61 (G12, G13, and Q61). Immunophenotyping of plasma cells reveals expression of CD38 and CD138 in both pPCL and MM, although higher expression of CD20, CD23, CD28, CD44, and CD45 and lower expression of CD9, CD56, CD71, CD117, and HLA-DR may be found in pPCL compared to MM. Gene expression profiling in pPCL has shown downregulation of genes associated with bone marrow microenvironment and bone diseases in MM, such as DKK1, KIT, and NCAM1 genes. A global hypomethylation profile has been found in pPCL samples. Non-coding RNAs (miRNAs and lncRNAs) are dysregulated in pPCL, and some of them are associated with survival of patients (as shown in the figure).