Integrated genomic profiling, therapy response, and survival in adult acute myelogenous leukemia

B Parkin, P Ouillette, M Yildiz, K Saiya-Cork… - Clinical Cancer …, 2015 - AACR
B Parkin, P Ouillette, M Yildiz, K Saiya-Cork, K Shedden, SN Malek
Clinical Cancer Research, 2015AACR
Purpose: Recurrent gene mutations, chromosomal translocations, and acquired genomic
copy number aberrations (aCNA) have been variously associated with acute myelogenous
leukemia (AML) patient outcome. However, knowledge of the co-occurrence of such lesions
and the relative influence of different types of genomic alterations on clinical outcomes in
AML is still evolving. Experimental Design: We performed SNP 6.0 array-based genomic
profiling of aCNA/copy neutral loss-of-heterozygosity (cnLOH) along with sequence analysis …
Abstract
Purpose: Recurrent gene mutations, chromosomal translocations, and acquired genomic copy number aberrations (aCNA) have been variously associated with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) patient outcome. However, knowledge of the co-occurrence of such lesions and the relative influence of different types of genomic alterations on clinical outcomes in AML is still evolving.
Experimental Design: We performed SNP 6.0 array-based genomic profiling of aCNA/copy neutral loss-of-heterozygosity (cnLOH) along with sequence analysis of 13 commonly mutated genes on purified leukemic blast DNA from 156 prospectively enrolled non-FAB-M3 AML patients across the clinical spectrum of de novo, secondary, and therapy-related AML.
Results:TP53 and RUNX1 mutations are strongly associated with the presence of SNP-A–based aCNA/cnLOH, while FLT3 and NPM1 mutations are strongly associated with the absence of aCNA/cnLOH. The presence of mutations in RUNX1, ASXL1, and TP53, elevated SNP-A–based genomic complexity, and specific recurrent aCNAs predicted failure to achieve a complete response to induction chemotherapy. The presence of ≥1 aCNA/cnLOH and higher thresholds predicted for poor long-term survival irrespective of TP53 status, and the presence of ≥1 aCNA/cnLOH added negative prognostic information to knowledge of mutations in TET2, IDH1, NPM1, DNMT3A, and RUNX1. Results of multivariate analyses support a dominant role for TP53 mutations and a role for elevated genomic complexity as predictors of short survival in AML.
Conclusions: Integrated genomic profiling of a clinically relevant adult AML cohort identified genomic aberrations most associated with SNP-A–based genomic complexity, resistance to intensive induction therapies, and shortened overall survival. Identifying SNP-A–based lesions adds prognostic value to the status of several recurrently mutated genes. Clin Cancer Res; 21(9); 2045–56. ©2015 AACR.
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