MinimuMM-seq: Genome Sequencing of Circulating Tumor Cells for Minimally Invasive Molecular Characterization of Multiple Myeloma Pathology

Author:

Dutta Ankit K.123ORCID,Alberge Jean-Baptiste123ORCID,Lightbody Elizabeth D.123ORCID,Boehner Cody J.123ORCID,Dunford Andrew3ORCID,Sklavenitis-Pistofidis Romanos123ORCID,Mouhieddine Tarek H.123ORCID,Cowan Annie N.12ORCID,Su Nang Kham123ORCID,Horowitz Erica M.12ORCID,Barr Hadley12ORCID,Hevenor Laura12ORCID,Beckwith Jenna B.12ORCID,Perry Jacqueline12ORCID,Cao Amanda12ORCID,Lin Ziao3ORCID,Kuhr Frank K.4ORCID,Mastro Richard G. Del4ORCID,Nadeem Omar12ORCID,Greipp Patricia T.5ORCID,Stewart Chip3ORCID,Auclair Daniel6ORCID,Getz Gad37ORCID,Ghobrial Irene M.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1Center for Prevention of Progression of Blood Cancers, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts.

2. 2Department of Medical Oncology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.

3. 3Cancer Program, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

4. 4Menarini Silicon Biosystems, Huntingdon Valley, Pennsylvania.

5. 5Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo Clinic Comprehensive Cancer Center, Rochester, Minnesota.

6. 6Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation, Norwalk, Connecticut.

7. 7Cancer Center and Department of Pathology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.

Abstract

Abstract Multiple myeloma (MM) develops from well-defined precursor stages; however, invasive bone marrow (BM) biopsy limits screening and monitoring strategies for patients. We enumerated circulating tumor cells (CTC) from 261 patients (84 monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance, 155 smoldering multiple myeloma, and 22 MM), with neoplastic cells detected in 84%. We developed a novel approach, MinimuMM-seq, which enables the detection of translocations and copy-number abnormalities through whole-genome sequencing of highly pure CTCs. Application to CTCs in a cohort of 51 patients, 24 with paired BM, was able to detect 100% of clinically reported BM biopsy events and could replace molecular cytogenetics for diagnostic yield and risk classification. Longitudinal sampling of CTCs in 8 patients revealed major clones could be tracked in the blood, with clonal evolution and shifting dynamics of subclones over time. Our findings provide proof of concept that CTC detection and genomic profiling could be used clinically for monitoring and managing disease in MM. Significance: In this study, we established an approach enabling the enumeration and sequencing of CTCs to replace standard molecular cytogenetics. CTCs harbored the same pathognomonic MM abnormalities as BM plasma cells. Longitudinal sampling of serial CTCs was able to track clonal dynamics over time and detect the emergence of high-risk genetic subclones.

Publisher

American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)

Subject

Oncology

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