| Literature DB >> 35902731 |
Lioba Schönfeld1, Jenny Rinke1, Anna Hinze1, Saskia N Nagel1, Vivien Schäfer1, Thomas Schenk1, Christian Fabisch1, Tim H Brümmendorf2, Andreas Burchert3, Philipp le Coutre4, Stefan W Krause5, Susanne Saussele6, Fatemeh Safizadeh7, Markus Pfirrmann7, Andreas Hochhaus1, Thomas Ernst8.
Abstract
Gene mutations independent of BCR::ABL1 have been identified in newly diagnosed patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in chronic phase, whereby mutations in epigenetic modifier genes were most common. These findings prompted the systematic analysis of prevalence, dynamics, and prognostic significance of such mutations, in a clinically well-characterized patient population of 222 CML patients from the TIGER study (CML-V) by targeted next-generation sequencing covering 54 myeloid leukemia-associated genes. In total, 53/222 CML patients (24%) carried 60 mutations at diagnosis with ASXL1 being most commonly affected (n = 20). To study mutation dynamics, longitudinal deep sequencing analysis of serial samples was performed in 100 patients after 12, 24, and 36 months of therapy. Typical patterns of clonal evolution included eradication, persistence, and emergence of mutated clones. Patients carrying an ASXL1 mutation at diagnosis showed a less favorable molecular response to nilotinib treatment, as a major molecular response (MMR) was achieved less frequently at month 12, 18, and 24 compared to all other patients. Patients with ASXL1 mutations were also younger and more frequently found in the high risk category, suggesting a central role of clonal evolution associated with ASXL1 mutations in CML pathogenesis.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35902731 PMCID: PMC9417980 DOI: 10.1038/s41375-022-01648-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Leukemia ISSN: 0887-6924 Impact factor: 12.883
Patients’ characteristics.
| Total | No mutations | All mutations | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Other mutations | |||||
| Age at diagnosis (years) | |||||
| Median (range) | 52 (18–79) | 52 (18–79) | 54 (19–78) | 47 (24–68) | 56 (19–78) |
| Sex ( | |||||
| Male | 140 (63%) | 108 (64%) | 32 (60%) | 15 (75%) | 17 (52%) |
| Female | 82 (37%) | 61 (36%) | 21 (40%) | 5 (25%) | 16 (48%) |
| EUTOS score ( | |||||
| Low risk | 203 (91%) | 157 (93%) | 46 (87%) | 13 (65%) | 33 (100%) |
| High risk | 19 (9%) | 12 (7%) | 7 (13%) | 7 (35%) | 0 (0%) |
| b2a2 | 86 (39%) | 69 (41%) | 17 (32%) | 5 (25%) | 12 (36%) |
| b3a2 | 100 (45%) | 72 (43%) | 28 (53%) | 11 (55%) | 17 (52%) |
| b2a2 + b3a2 | 36 (16%) | 28 (17%) | 8 (15%) | 4 (20%) | 4 (12%) |
| Total | 222 | 169 | 53 | 20 | 33 |
EUTOS European Treatment and Outcome Study.
Fig. 1Landscape of somatic mutations in 222 chronic phase CML patients at diagnosis by targeted next-generation sequencing.
Mutations were found in 53/222 patients (24%) with ASXL1 being the most commonly affected gene (n = 20). Patients and genes are displayed in columns and rows, respectively. A unique color is assigned to each mutated gene. Bisected cell represents two variants in the same gene and patient.
Dynamics of somatic mutations in 100 chronic phase CML patients at diagnosis and after 12, 24, and 36 months of nilotinib therapy.
(a) Variants detected only at diagnosis or suppressed and subsequently eradicated in follow-up. ASXL1 L775X re-occurred at month 24 in patient #21. Samples with molecular response of at least MMR are shaded in green, no MMR is shaded in red. Low level allele variants (<5% variant allele frequency) are displayed in brackets. n = 19 patients.
(b) Variants detected in every analyzed sample of the respective patient. Samples with molecular response of at least MMR are shaded in green. Low level allele variants (<5% variant allele frequency) are displayed in brackets. n = 5 patients.
(c) Variants detected only in follow-up samples. Samples with molecular response of at least MMR are shaded in green, no MMR is shaded in red. Low level allele variants (<5% variant allele frequency) are displayed in brackets. n = 13 patients.
Fig. 2Prevalence of somatic mutations in 100 chronic phase CML patients during nilotinib treatment.
Longitudinal deep sequencing analysis of serial samples after (A) 12, (B) 24, and (C) 36 months of therapy. DNMT3A mutations were most frequently identified. Patients and genes are displayed in columns and rows, respectively. A unique color was assigned to each mutated gene. A bisected cell represents two variants in the same gene and patient. Asterisks stand for low allele variants (<5% variant allele frequency).
Fig. 3Proportion of patients with major molecular response (MMR) based on mutation status at diagnosis.
Patients carrying an ASXL1 mutation at diagnosis achieved significantly lower MMR probabilities than patients without any mutation, showing 55% (95%-CI: 34–74%) at 12 months (p = 0.0036), 60% (95%-CI: 39–78%) at 18 months (p = 0.0018), and 65% (95%-CI: 43–82%) at 24 months (p = 0.0076). Black vertical lines describe the 95% confidence intervals around the proportions indicated by the upper end of the bars. MMR Major molecular response.