Affiliation:
1. Department of Hematology Hospital Clínic de Barcelona Barcelona Spain
2. Fundació de Recerca Clínic Barcelona‐Institut d’Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer (FRCB‐IDIBAPS) Barcelona Spain
3. Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Cáncer (CIBERONC) Madrid Spain
4. Departament de Fonaments Clínics, Facultat de Medicina i Ciències de la Salut Universitat de Barcelona Barcelona Spain
5. Department of Pathology Haematopathology Section Hospital Clínic de Barcelona Barcelona Spain
6. Department of Haematology University Hospital of Salamanca (HUS/IBSAL) and Cancer Research Institute of Salamanca‐IBMCC (USAL‐CSIC) Salamanca Spain
7. Team LIB ISEM 1111 International Center for Research in Infectiology Université Claude Bernard Lyon I Pierre‐Bénite France
8. France and Department of Biological Haematology Hôpital Lyon Sud Hospices Civils de Lyon Pierre‐Bénite France
9. Biochemie Zentrum Heidelberg (BZH) and Cell Networks Bioquant Ruprecht‐Karl University of Heidelberg Heidelberg Germany
Abstract
AbstractWhile some follicular lymphoma (FL) patients do not require treatment or experience prolonged responses, others relapse early, and little is known about genetic alterations specific to patients with a particular clinical behavior. We selected 56 grade 1–3A FL patients according to their need of treatment or timing of relapse: never treated (n = 7), non‐relapsed (19), late relapse (14), early relapse or POD24 (11), and primary refractory (5). We analyzed 56 diagnostic and 12 paired relapse lymphoid tissue biopsies and performed copy number alteration (CNA) analysis and next generation sequencing (NGS). We identified six focal driver losses (1p36.32, 6p21.32, 6q14.1, 6q23.3, 9p21.3, 10q23.33) and 1p36.33 copy‐neutral loss of heterozygosity (CN‐LOH). By integrating CNA and NGS results, the most frequently altered genes/regions were KMT2D (79%), CREBBP (67%), TNFRSF14 (46%) and BCL2 (40%). Although we found that mutations in PIM1, FOXO1 and TMEM30A were associated with an adverse clinical behavior, definitive conclusions cannot be drawn, due to the small sample size. We identified common precursor cells harboring early oncogenic alterations of the KMT2D, CREBBP, TNFRSF14 and EP300 genes and 16p13.3‐p13.2 CN‐LOH. Finally, we established the functional consequences of mutations by means of protein modeling (CD79B, PLCG2, PIM1, MCL1 and IRF8). These data expand the knowledge on the genomics behind the heterogeneous FL population and, upon replication in larger cohorts, could contribute to risk stratification and the development of targeted therapies.
Funder
Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Cáncer
Subject
Cancer Research,Oncology,Hematology,General Medicine