The clinical and molecular spectrum of ETV6 mutated myeloid neoplasms

Author:

Gurney Mark1ORCID,Chekkaf Ismahene1,Baranwal Anmol1ORCID,Basmaci Rami1,Katamesh Bahga1,Greipp Patricia1,Foran James M.1ORCID,Badar Talha1ORCID,Mangaonkar Abhishek A.1,Begna Kebede H.1,Gangat Naseema1ORCID,Patnaik Mrinal M.1,Litzow Mark R.1,Shah Mithun V.1ORCID,Viswanatha David S.1,He Rong1ORCID,Alkhateeb Hassan B.1,Al‐Kali Aref1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Hematology Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

Abstract

AbstractETV6 mutations are rare but recurrent somatic events in myeloid neoplasms and are negatively prognostic in myelodysplastic syndrome. We set out to examine the clinical and molecular characteristics of patients undergoing investigation for myeloid neoplasms, found to have deleterious ETV6 mutations. ETV6 mutations occurred in 33 of 5793 (0.6%) cases investigated and predominantly in high‐risk disease entities including MDS with increased blasts, primary myelofibrosis and AML, myelodysplasia‐related. In three cases, isolated iso (17q) karyotype was concurrently detected, an otherwise rare karyotype in myeloid neoplasms. ETV6 mutations were frequently subclonal and never occurred as an isolated abnormality with ASXL1 (n = 22, 75%), SRSF2 (n = 14, 42%) and SETBP1 (n = 11, 33%) the predominant co‐mutations. Restricting to patients with MDS, higher rates of ASXL1, SETBP1, RUNX1 and U2AF1 mutations occurred in ETV6 mutated cases, relative to a consecutive control cohort with wild‐type ETV6. The median OS of the cohort was 17.5 months. This report highlights the clinical and molecular associations of somatic ETV6 mutations in myeloid neoplasms, suggests their occurrence as a later event, and proposes further translational research questions for their role in myeloid neoplasia.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Hematology

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