Clonal competition with alternating dominance in multiple myeloma

Jonathan J. Keats(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Marta Chesi(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Jan B. Egan(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Victoria M. Garbitt(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Stephen Palmer(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Esteban Braggio(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Scott Van Wier(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Patrick R. Blackburn(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Angela Baker(Translational Genomics Research Institute), Angela Dispenzieri(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Shaji Kumar(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), S. Vincent Rajkumar(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), John D. Carpten(Translational Genomics Research Institute), Michael T. Barrett(Translational Genomics Research Institute), Rafaël Fonseca(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), A. Keith Stewart(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), P. Leif Bergsagel(Mayo Clinic in Arizona)
Blood
April 13, 2012
Cited by 634Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Emerging evidence indicates that tumors can follow several evolutionary paths over a patient's disease course. With the use of serial genomic analysis of samples collected at different points during the disease course of 28 patients with multiple myeloma, we found that the genomes of standard-risk patients show few changes over time, whereas those of cytogenetically high-risk patients show significantly more changes over time. The results indicate the existence of 3 temporal tumor types, which can either be genetically stable, linearly evolving, or heterogeneous clonal mixtures with shifting predominant clones. A detailed analysis of one high-risk patient sampled at 7 time points over the entire disease course identified 2 competing subclones that alternate in a back and forth manner for dominance with therapy until one clone underwent a dramatic linear evolution. With the use of the Vk*MYC genetically engineered mouse model of myeloma we modeled this competition between subclones for predominance occurring spontaneously and with therapeutic selection.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis