Landscape of genetic lesions in 944 patients with myelodysplastic syndromes

Torsten Haferlach(Munich Leukemia Laboratory (Germany)), Yasunobu Nagata(Kyoto University), Vera Grossmann(Munich Leukemia Laboratory (Germany)), Yusuke Okuno(The University of Tokyo), Ulrike Bacher(Munich Leukemia Laboratory (Germany)), Genta Nagae(The University of Tokyo), Susanne Schnittger(Munich Leukemia Laboratory (Germany)), Masashi Sanada(Kyoto University), Ayana Kon(Kyoto University), Tamara Alpermann(Munich Leukemia Laboratory (Germany)), Kenichi Yoshida(Kyoto University), Andreas Roller(Munich Leukemia Laboratory (Germany)), Niroshan Nadarajah(Munich Leukemia Laboratory (Germany)), Yuichi Shiraishi(The University of Tokyo), Yusuke Shiozawa(Kyoto University), Kenichi Chiba(The University of Tokyo), Hiroko Tanaka(The University of Tokyo), H. Phillip Koeffler(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), H-U Klein(University of Münster), Martin Dugas(University of Münster), Hiroyuki Aburatani(The University of Tokyo), Alexander Kohlmann(Munich Leukemia Laboratory (Germany)), Satoru Miyano(Tokyo Medical University), Claudia Haferlach(Munich Leukemia Laboratory (Germany)), Wolfgang Kern(Munich Leukemia Laboratory (Germany)), Seishi Ogawa(Kyoto University)
Leukemia
November 13, 2013
Cited by 1,518Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

High-throughput DNA sequencing significantly contributed to diagnosis and prognostication in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). We determined the biological and prognostic significance of genetic aberrations in MDS. In total, 944 patients with various MDS subtypes were screened for known/putative mutations/deletions in 104 genes using targeted deep sequencing and array-based genomic hybridization. In total, 845/944 patients (89.5%) harbored at least one mutation (median, 3 per patient; range, 0-12). Forty-seven genes were significantly mutated with TET2, SF3B1, ASXL1, SRSF2, DNMT3A, and RUNX1 mutated in >10% of cases. Many mutations were associated with higher risk groups and/or blast elevation. Survival was investigated in 875 patients. By univariate analysis, 25/48 genes (resulting from 47 genes tested significantly plus PRPF8) affected survival (P<0.05). The status of 14 genes combined with conventional factors revealed a novel prognostic model ('Model-1') separating patients into four risk groups ('low', 'intermediate', 'high', 'very high risk') with 3-year survival of 95.2, 69.3, 32.8, and 5.3% (P<0.001). Subsequently, a 'gene-only model' ('Model-2') was constructed based on 14 genes also yielding four significant risk groups (P<0.001). Both models were reproducible in the validation cohort (n=175 patients; P<0.001 each). Thus, large-scale genetic and molecular profiling of multiple target genes is invaluable for subclassification and prognostication in MDS patients.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis