The effect of haploidentical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation on comutations based on next-generation sequencing in adult acute myeloid leukemia patients with the FLT3-ITD mutation

Author:

Huang Xiao-Jun1ORCID,Tang Fei-Fei2,Zhao Xiao-Su3,Ruan Guo-Rui1,Jiang Qian1,Jiang Hao1,Xu Lan-Ping1ORCID,Zhang Xiao-hui1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Peking University People's Hospital

2. Peking University Institute of Hematology, People's hospital

3. Peking University People's Hospital, Peking University Institute of Hematology, National Clinical Research Center for Hematologic Disease, Beijing Key Laboratory of Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplan

Abstract

Abstract The objective of this study was to investigate which comutations based on next-generation sequencing (NGS) at diagnosis affect the clinical prognosis of de novo AML patients with FLT3-ITD mutations and the effect of haploidentical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (haplo-HSCT) on the comutations. We analyzed 95 de novo AML patients with FLT3-ITD mutations from January 2018 to August 2021 based on the NGS 99-gene platform. Forty-one other types of molecular mutations were detected. The most common cooccurring mutations were NPM1 (n = 43, 45.3%) and DNMT3A (n = 21, 22.1%). NPM1 mutation status did not affect the clinical outcomes. AML patients with FLT3-ITD and DNMT3A comutations had significantly worse 3-year DFS (25.2% and 62.6%, P = 0.003) and OS rates (57.3% vs. 73.1%, P = 0.047) than those without DNMT3A mutations and the survival was significantly more favorable after haplo-HSCT than chemotherapy (3-year DFS,77.1% vs. 15.4%, P = 0.009; 3-year OS, 82.8% vs. 46%, P = 0.001, respectively). By multivariate analysis, DNMT3A mutation was a risk factor for DFS and OS, while haplo-HSCT was a protective factor. DNMT3A mutation might be a poor prognostic factor in adult AML patients with FLT3-ITD mutations and haplo-HSCT could overcome the poor prognostic of DNMT3A comutation.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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