Genomic landscape and clonal evolution of acute myeloid leukemia with t(8;21): an international study on 331 patients

Author:

Christen Friederike1,Hoyer Kaja1,Yoshida Kenichi2,Hou Hsin-An3,Waldhueter Nils1,Heuser Michael4,Hills Robert K.5,Chan Willy1,Hablesreiter Raphael1,Blau Olga1,Ochi Yotaro2,Klement Piroska4,Chou Wen-Chien3,Blau Igor-Wolfgang1,Tang Jih-Luh3,Zemojtel Tomasz6,Shiraishi Yuichi7,Shiozawa Yusuke2,Thol Felicitas4,Ganser Arnold4,Löwenberg Bob8,Linch David C.9,Bullinger Lars110,Valk Peter J. M.8,Tien Hwei-Fang3,Gale Rosemary E.9,Ogawa Seishi2,Damm Frederik110

Affiliation:

1. Charité–Universitätsmedizin Berlin, corporate member of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, and Department of Hematology, Oncology, and Tumor Immunology, Berlin Institute of Health, Berlin, Germany;

2. Department of Pathology and Tumor Biology, Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan;

3. Department of Internal Medicine, National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan;

4. Department of Hematology, Hemostasis, Oncology, and Stem Cell Transplantation, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany;

5. Centre for Trials Research, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom;

6. Berlin Institute of Health Core Genomics Facility, Charité, University Medical Center, Berlin, Germany;

7. Laboratory of Sequence Analysis, Human Genome Center, Institute of Medical Science, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan;

8. Department of Hematology, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands;

9. Department of Haematology, University College London Cancer Institute, London, United Kingdom; and

10. German Cancer Consortium and German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Acute myeloid leukemia with t(8;21)(q22;q22) is characterized by considerable clinical and biological heterogeneity leading to relapse in up to 40% of patients. We sequenced coding regions or hotspot areas of 66 recurrently mutated genes in a cohort of 331 t(8;21) patients. At least 1 mutation, in addition to t(8;21), was identified in 95%, with a mean of 2.2 driver mutations per patient. Recurrent mutations occurred in genes related to RAS/RTK signaling (63.4%), epigenetic regulators (45%), cohesin complex (13.6%), MYC signaling (10.3%), and the spliceosome (7.9%). Our study identified mutations in previously unappreciated genes: GIGYF2, DHX15, and G2E3. Based on high mutant levels, pairwise precedence, and stability at relapse, epigenetic regulator mutations were likely to occur before signaling mutations. In 34% of RAS/RTKmutated patients, we identified multiple mutations in the same pathway. Deep sequencing (∼42 000×) of 126 mutations in 62 complete remission samples from 56 patients identified 16 persisting mutations in 12 patients, of whom 5 lacked RUNX1-RUNX1T1 in quantitative polymerase chain reaction analysis. KIThigh mutations defined by a mutant level ≥25% were associated with inferior relapse-free survival (hazard ratio, 1.96; 95% confidence interval, 1.22-3.15; P = .005). Together with age and white blood cell counts, JAK2, FLT3-internal tandem duplicationhigh, and KIThigh mutations were identified as significant prognostic factors for overall survival in multivariate analysis. Whole-exome sequencing was performed on 19 paired diagnosis, remission, and relapse trios. Exome-wide analysis showed an average of 16 mutations with signs of substantial clonal evolution. Based on the resemblance of diagnosis and relapse pairs, genetically stable (n = 13) and unstable (n = 6) subgroups could be identified.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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