Clinical and biological implications of driver mutations in myelodysplastic syndromes

Elli Papaemmanuil(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Moritz Gerstung(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Luca Malcovati(University of Pavia), Sudhir Tauro(University of Dundee), Gunes Gundem(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Peter Van Loo(Vlaams Instituut voor Biotechnologie), Sung-Soo Yoon(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Peter Ellis(Wellcome Sanger Institute), David C. Wedge(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Andrea Pellagatti(University of Oxford), Adam Shlien(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Michael J. Groves(University of Dundee), Simon Forbes(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Keiran Raine(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Jon Hinton(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Laura Mudie(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Stuart McLaren(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Claire Hardy(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Calli Latimer(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Matteo Giovanni Della Porta(University of Pavia), Sarah O’Meara(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Ilaria Ambaglio(University of Pavia), Anna Gallì(University of Pavia), Adam P. Butler(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Gunilla Walldin(Karolinska Institutet), Jon W. Teague(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Lynn Quek(University of Oxford), Alex Sternberg(Great Western Hospital), Carlo Gambacorti‐Passerini(University of Milano-Bicocca), Nicholas C.P. Cross(University of Southampton), Anthony R. Green(University of Cambridge), Jacqueline Boultwood(University of Oxford), Paresh Vyas(Karolinska Institutet), Eva Hellström‐Lindberg(Karolinska Institutet), David Bowen(St James's University Hospital), Mario Cazzola(University of Pavia), Michael R. Stratton(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Peter J. Campbell(University of Cambridge)
Blood
September 13, 2013
Cited by 1,827

Abstract

Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are a heterogeneous group of chronic hematological malignancies characterized by dysplasia, ineffective hematopoiesis and a variable risk of progression to acute myeloid leukemia. Sequencing of MDS genomes has identified mutations in genes implicated in RNA splicing, DNA modification, chromatin regulation, and cell signaling. We sequenced 111 genes across 738 patients with MDS or closely related neoplasms (including chronic myelomonocytic leukemia and MDS-myeloproliferative neoplasms) to explore the role of acquired mutations in MDS biology and clinical phenotype. Seventy-eight percent of patients had 1 or more oncogenic mutations. We identify complex patterns of pairwise association between genes, indicative of epistatic interactions involving components of the spliceosome machinery and epigenetic modifiers. Coupled with inferences on subclonal mutations, these data suggest a hypothesis of genetic "predestination," in which early driver mutations, typically affecting genes involved in RNA splicing, dictate future trajectories of disease evolution with distinct clinical phenotypes. Driver mutations had equivalent prognostic significance, whether clonal or subclonal, and leukemia-free survival deteriorated steadily as numbers of driver mutations increased. Thus, analysis of oncogenic mutations in large, well-characterized cohorts of patients illustrates the interconnections between the cancer genome and disease biology, with considerable potential for clinical application.


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