Genetics and Pathogenesis of Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma

Roland Schmitz(World Wide Web Consortium), George W. Wright(World Wide Web Consortium), Da Wei Huang(World Wide Web Consortium), Calvin A. Johnson(National Institutes of Health), James D. Phelan(World Wide Web Consortium), James Q. Wang(World Wide Web Consortium), Sandrine Roulland(World Wide Web Consortium), Monica Kasbekar(World Wide Web Consortium), Ryan M. Young(World Wide Web Consortium), Arthur L. Shaffer(World Wide Web Consortium), Daniel J. Hodson(World Wide Web Consortium), Wenming Xiao(World Wide Web Consortium), Xin Yu(World Wide Web Consortium), Yandan Yang(World Wide Web Consortium), Hong Zhao(World Wide Web Consortium), Weihong Xu(World Wide Web Consortium), Xuelu Liu(National Institutes of Health), Bin Zhou(National Institutes of Health), Wei Du(National Institutes of Health), Wing C. Chan(City Of Hope National Medical Center), Elaine S. Jaffe(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Randy D. Gascoyne(BC Cancer Agency), Joseph M. Connors(BC Cancer Agency), Elı́as Campo(World Wide Web Consortium), Armando López‐Guillermo(World Wide Web Consortium), Andreas Rosenwald(University of Würzburg), German Ott(Robert Bosch Hospital), Jan Delabie(University Health Network), Lisa M. Rimsza(World Wide Web Consortium), Kevin Tay Kuang Wei(World Wide Web Consortium), Andrew D. Zelenetz(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), John P. Leonard(Cornell University), Nancy L. Bartlett(Washington University in St. Louis), Bao Tran(Leidos (United States)), Jyoti Shetty(Leidos (United States)), Yongmei Zhao(Leidos (United States)), Dan Soppet(Leidos (United States)), Stefania Pittaluga(Cancer Institute (WIA)), Wyndham H. Wilson(World Wide Web Consortium), Louis M. Staudt(World Wide Web Consortium)
New England Journal of Medicine
April 11, 2018
Cited by 2,240Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Diffuse large B-cell lymphomas (DLBCLs) are phenotypically and genetically heterogeneous. Gene-expression profiling has identified subgroups of DLBCL (activated B-cell-like [ABC], germinal-center B-cell-like [GCB], and unclassified) according to cell of origin that are associated with a differential response to chemotherapy and targeted agents. We sought to extend these findings by identifying genetic subtypes of DLBCL based on shared genomic abnormalities and to uncover therapeutic vulnerabilities based on tumor genetics. METHODS: We studied 574 DLBCL biopsy samples using exome and transcriptome sequencing, array-based DNA copy-number analysis, and targeted amplicon resequencing of 372 genes to identify genes with recurrent aberrations. We developed and implemented an algorithm to discover genetic subtypes based on the co-occurrence of genetic alterations. RESULTS: and CD79B mutations), BN2 (based on BCL6 fusions and NOTCH2 mutations), N1 (based on NOTCH1 mutations), and EZB (based on EZH2 mutations and BCL2 translocations). Genetic aberrations in multiple genes distinguished each genetic subtype from other DLBCLs. These subtypes differed phenotypically, as judged by differences in gene-expression signatures and responses to immunochemotherapy, with favorable survival in the BN2 and EZB subtypes and inferior outcomes in the MCD and N1 subtypes. Analysis of genetic pathways suggested that MCD and BN2 DLBCLs rely on "chronic active" B-cell receptor signaling that is amenable to therapeutic inhibition. CONCLUSIONS: We uncovered genetic subtypes of DLBCL with distinct genotypic, epigenetic, and clinical characteristics, providing a potential nosology for precision-medicine strategies in DLBCL. (Funded by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health and others.).


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