Loss of heterozygosity as a marker of homologous repair deficiency in multiple myeloma: a role for PARP inhibition?

Charlotte Pawlyn(Institute of Cancer Research), Andrea Loehr(Clovis Oncology (United States)), Cody Ashby(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Ruslana G. Tytarenko(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Shayu Deshpande(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), James Sun(Foundation Medicine (United States)), Kyle Fedorchak(Foundation Medicine (United States)), Tariq I. Mughal(Foundation Medicine (United States)), Faith E. Davies(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Brian A. Walker(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences), Gareth J. Morgan(University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences)
Leukemia
February 2, 2018
Cited by 62Open Access
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Abstract

PARP inhibitors can induce synthetic lethality in tumors characterized by homologous recombination deficiency (HRD), which can be detected by evaluating genome-wide loss of heterozygosity (LOH). Multiple myeloma (MM) is a genetically unstable tumor and we hypothesized that HRD-related LOH (HRD-LOH) could be detected in patient samples, supporting a potential role for PARP inhibition in MM. Using results from targeted next-generation sequencing studies (FoundationOne® Heme), we analyzed HRD-LOH in patients at all disease stages (MGUS (n = 7), smoldering MM (SMM, n = 30), newly diagnosed MM (NDMM, n = 71), treated MM (TRMM, n = 64), and relapsed MM (RLMM, n = 234)) using an algorithm to identify HRD-LOH segments. We demonstrated HRD-LOH in MM samples, increasing as disease progresses. The extent of genomic HRD-LOH correlated with high-risk disease markers. Outcome of RLMM patients, the biggest clinical group, was analyzed and patients with HRD-LOH above the third quartile (≥5% HRD-LOH) had significantly worse progression-free and overall survival than those with lower levels (p < 0.001). Mutations in key homologous recombination genes account for some, but not all, of the cases with an excess of HRD-LOH. These data support the further evaluation of PARP inhibitors in MM patients, particularly in the relapsed setting with a high unmet need for new treatments.


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