scholarly journals Whole Genome Sequencing Identifies Non-KIT Mutations and Cytogenetic Aberrations in Systemic Mastocytosis but Has Limited Sensitivity for Detection of KIT D816V

Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 1495-1495
Author(s):  
Gregor Hoermann ◽  
Manja Meggendorfer ◽  
Constance Baer ◽  
Heiko Müller ◽  
Wencke Walter ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Systemic mastocytosis (SM) is a hematologic neoplasm characterized by the infiltration of clonal mast cells in the bone marrow or other extra-cutaneous organs. The clinical course varies between advanced and non-advanced (indolent and smoldering SM) forms of SM. The vast majority of patients harbor the activating D816V mutation in the KIT tyrosine kinase. Additional somatic mutations in other genes have been recognized as risk factors in SM. Cytogenetic aberrations are rarely found in SM but have been associated with advanced disease. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) and whole transcriptome sequencing (WTS) have been described as an alternative to cytogenetics and targeted molecular genetic analysis in myeloid cancers. Aim: To assess the ability of WGS/WTS to detect cytogenetic aberrations and recurrent somatic mutations in SM. Methods: 120 patients (51 female, 69 male) diagnosed with SM were analyzed with WGS/WTS and results were compared with orthogonal data of KIT D816V PCR, targeted sequencing, and cytogenetics. 47 patients (39%) were diagnosed with advanced SM (1 mast cell leukemia, 3 aggressive SM, 43 SM with associated hematologic neoplasm). For WGS, 2x151bp paired-end reads were generated on NovaSeq 6000 and HiSeqX machines (Illumina, San Diego, CA). BaseSpace's Tumor/Normal app v3 was used to call variants with Strelka Somatic Variant Caller v2.4.7 and structural variants (aberrations with >50bp in size) with Manta (v0.28.0). Genomic DNA from a mixture of multiple anonymous donors (Promega, Fitchburg, WI, USA) was used as normal. For WTS, 2x101 bp paired-end reads were produced with a median of 50 mio. reads per sample, aligned with STAR v2.5.0, and variants were called using Isaac Variant Caller v2.3.13. Results: WGS/WTS detected cytogenetic aberrations in 21% of patients: 2 patients displayed a complex aberrant karyotype, 3 balanced structural aberrations, 16 copy number alterations, and 6 copy number neutral losses of heterozygosity. Aberrations detected by chromosome banding analysis were also found by WGS in all but three patients (small clones with aberrations present in ≤20% of metaphases and <10% of interphase nuclei as determined by FISH). In contrast, WGS/WTS detected additional aberrations in 16 patients. The frequency of chromosomal aberrations detected by WGS/WTS was higher in advanced compared to non-advanced SM (34% vs. 12%, p<0.05). KIT D816V was detected by PCR in 98%, by WGS in 21% and by WTS in 46% of patients. The detection rate by WGS was significantly higher in advanced (36%) compared to non-advanced SM (12%, p<0.05) while no difference was observed for WTS (45% vs. 47%). Somatic mutations outside of KIT were analyzed within a subset of 121 genes recurrently mutated in hematologic neoplasms. 46% of patients showed non-KIT mutations with a median of 2 mutations per patient. Both frequency of non-KIT mutations as well as the median number of mutations per patient was higher in advanced (83%; n=3) compared to non-advanced SM (22%, n=1, p<0.05). Finally, we analyzed the impact of genetic aberrations on survival in our SM cohort. Patients were grouped according to the presence of chromosomal aberrations and gene mutations (non-KIT) as assessed by WGS/WTS. SM patients with both types of aberrations (n=16), one type of aberration (n=47; gene mutations only n=38; chromosomal aberrations only n=8), or no aberration but KIT D816V (n=57) showed significant differences in overall survival (p<0.05, Figure 1). Con clusions: WGS/WTS has limited sensitivity for detection of KIT D816V in SM. This finding can be explained by the low KIT D816V mutation burden typically found in bone marrow aspirates of SM patients. In line, we observed a slightly higher detection rate in advanced SM and in RNA-based WTS analysis. As WGS/WTS will be applied for the diagnostic workup of myeloid malignancies in the future and SM associated with other hematologic neoplasms may be overlooked if not specifically investigated, additional PCR-based techniques are still mandatory to rule out KIT D816V as a diagnostic criterion for SM. In contrast, WGS/WTS detects both chromosomal aberrations and additional gene mutations in patients with SM and can be used as an alternative to cytogenetics and targeted sequencing for risk assessment. In particular, the absence of genetic aberrations in WGS/WTS identifies SM patients with indolent course of the disease and favorable prognosis. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Hoermann: Novartis: Honoraria. Kern: MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Other: Part ownership. Haferlach: MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Other: Part ownership. Haferlach: MLL Munich Leukemia Laboratory: Other: Part ownership.

2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (11) ◽  
pp. 3987 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margherita Martelli ◽  
Cecilia Monaldi ◽  
Sara De Santis ◽  
Samantha Bruno ◽  
Manuela Mancini ◽  
...  

In recent years, molecular characterization and management of patients with systemic mastocytosis (SM) have greatly benefited from the application of advanced technologies. Highly sensitive and accurate assays for KIT D816V mutation detection and quantification have allowed the switch to non-invasive peripheral blood testing for patient screening; allele burden has prognostic implications and may be used to monitor therapeutic efficacy. Progress in genetic profiling of KIT, together with the use of next-generation sequencing panels for the characterization of associated gene mutations, have allowed the stratification of patients into three subgroups differing in terms of pathogenesis and prognosis: (i) patients with mast cell-restricted KIT D816V; (ii) patients with multilineage KIT D816V-involvement; (iii) patients with “multi-mutated disease”. Thanks to these findings, new prognostic scoring systems combining clinical and molecular data have been developed. Finally, non-genetic SETD2 histone methyltransferase loss of function has recently been identified in advanced SM. Assessment of SETD2 protein levels and activity might provide prognostic information and has opened new research avenues exploring alternative targeted therapeutic strategies. This review discusses how progress in recent years has rapidly complemented previous knowledge improving the molecular characterization of SM, and how this has the potential to impact on patient diagnosis and management.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (6) ◽  
pp. 2983
Author(s):  
William Shomali ◽  
Jason Gotlib

Systemic mastocytosis (SM) is a rare clonal hematologic neoplasm, driven, in almost all cases, by the activating KIT D816V mutation that leads to the growth and accumulation of neoplastic mast cells. While patients with advanced forms of SM have a poor prognosis, the introduction of KIT inhibitors (e.g., midostaurin, and avapritinib) has changed their outlook. Because of the heterogenous nature of advanced SM (advSM), successive iterations of response criteria have tried to capture different dimensions of the disease, including measures of mast cell burden (percentage of bone marrow mast cells and serum tryptase level), and mast cell-related organ damage (referred to as C findings). Historically, response criteria have been anchored to reversion of one or more organ damage finding(s) as a minimal criterion for response. This is a central principle of the Valent criteria, Mayo criteria, and International Working Group-Myeloproliferative Neoplasms Research and Treatment and European Competence Network on Mastocytosis (IWG-MRT-ECNM) consensus criteria. Irrespective of the response criteria, an ever-present challenge is how to apply response criteria in patients with SM and an associated hematologic neoplasm, where the presence of both diseases complicates assignment of organ damage and adjudication of response. In the context of trials with the selective KIT D816V inhibitor avapritinib, pure pathologic response (PPR) criteria, which rely solely on measures of mast cell burden and exclude consideration of organ damage findings, are being explored as more robust surrogate of overall survival. In addition, the finding that avapritinib can elicit complete molecular responses of KIT D816V allele burden, establishes a new benchmark for advSM and motivates the inclusion of definitions for molecular response in future criteria. Herein, we also outline how the concept of PPR can inform a proposal for new response criteria which use a tiered evaluation of pathologic, molecular, and clinical responses.


Hematology ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 (1) ◽  
pp. 127-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Shomali ◽  
Jason Gotlib

AbstractMastocytosis is a rare disease characterized by KIT-driven expansion and accumulation of neoplastic mast cells in various tissues. Although mediator symptoms related to mast cell activation can impose a symptom burden in cutaneous disease and across the spectrum of systemic mastocytosis subtypes, the presence of an associated hematologic neoplasm and/or organ damage denotes advanced disease and the potential for increased morbidity and mortality. In addition to the revised 2016 World Health Organization classification of mastocytosis, a new diagnostic and treatment toolkit, tethered to enhanced molecular characterization and monitoring, is poised to transform the management of patients with advanced systemic mastocytosis (advSM). Although the efficacy of midostaurin and novel selective KIT D816V inhibitors, such as avapritinib (BLU-285), have validated KIT as a therapeutic target, the clinical and biologic heterogeneity of advSM requires that we reimagine the blueprint for tackling these diseases and use tools that move beyond KIT-centric approaches.


Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (13) ◽  
pp. 3366
Author(s):  
Anna-Sophie Liegmann ◽  
Kerstin Heselmeyer-Haddad ◽  
Annette Lischka ◽  
Daniela Hirsch ◽  
Wei-Dong Chen ◽  
...  

Purpose: Older breast cancer patients are underrepresented in cancer research even though the majority (81.4%) of women dying of breast cancer are 55 years and older. Here we study a common phenomenon observed in breast cancer which is a large inter- and intratumor heterogeneity; this poses a tremendous clinical challenge, for example with respect to treatment stratification. To further elucidate genomic instability and tumor heterogeneity in older patients, we analyzed the genetic aberration profiles of 39 breast cancer patients aged 50 years and older (median 67 years) with either short (median 2.4 years) or long survival (median 19 years). The analysis was based on copy number enumeration of eight breast cancer-associated genes using multiplex interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization (miFISH) of single cells, and by targeted next-generation sequencing of 563 cancer-related genes. Results: We detected enormous inter- and intratumor heterogeneity, yet maintenance of common cancer gene mutations and breast cancer specific chromosomal gains and losses. The gain of COX2 was most common (72%), followed by MYC (69%); losses were most prevalent for CDH1 (74%) and TP53 (69%). The degree of intratumor heterogeneity did not correlate with disease outcome. Comparing the miFISH results of diploid with aneuploid tumor samples significant differences were found: aneuploid tumors showed significantly higher average signal numbers, copy number alterations (CNAs) and instability indices. Mutations in PIKC3A were mostly restricted to luminal A tumors. Furthermore, a significant co-occurrence of CNAs of DBC2/MYC, HER2/DBC2 and HER2/TP53 and mutual exclusivity of CNAs of HER2 and PIK3CA mutations and CNAs of CCND1 and PIK3CA mutations were revealed. Conclusion: Our results provide a comprehensive picture of genome instability profiles with a large variety of inter- and intratumor heterogeneity in breast cancer patients aged 50 years and older. In most cases, the distribution of chromosomal aneuploidies was consistent with previous results; however, striking exceptions, such as tumors driven by exclusive loss of chromosomes, were identified.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Weihua Pan ◽  
Desheng Gong ◽  
Da Sun ◽  
Haohui Luo

AbstractDue to the high complexity of cancer genome, it is too difficult to generate complete cancer genome map which contains the sequence of every DNA molecule until now. Nevertheless, phasing each chromosome in cancer genome into two haplotypes according to germline mutations provides a suboptimal solution to understand cancer genome. However, phasing cancer genome is also a challenging problem, due to the limit in experimental and computational technologies. Hi-C data is widely used in phasing in recent years due to its long-range linkage information and provides an opportunity for solving the problem of phasing cancer genome. The existing Hi-C based phasing methods can not be applied to cancer genome directly, because the somatic mutations in cancer genome such as somatic SNPs, copy number variations and structural variations greatly reduce the correctness and completeness. Here, we propose a new Hi-C based pipeline for phasing cancer genome called HiCancer. HiCancer solves different kinds of somatic mutations and variations, and take advantage of allelic copy number imbalance and linkage disequilibrium to improve the correctness and completeness of phasing. According to our experiments in K562 and KBM-7 cell lines, HiCancer is able to generate very high-quality chromosome-level haplotypes for cancer genome with only Hi-C data.


Author(s):  
Wenhui Li ◽  
Wanjun Lei ◽  
Xiaopei Chao ◽  
Xiaochen Song ◽  
Yalan Bi ◽  
...  

AbstractThe association between human papillomavirus (HPV) integration and relevant genomic changes in uterine cervical adenocarcinoma is poorly understood. This study is to depict the genomic mutational landscape in a cohort of 20 patients. HPV+ and HPV− groups were defined as patients with and without HPV integration in the host genome. The genetic changes between these two groups were described and compared by whole-genome sequencing (WGS) and whole-exome sequencing (WES). WGS identified 2916 copy number variations and 743 structural variations. WES identified 6113 somatic mutations, with a mutational burden of 2.4 mutations/Mb. Six genes were predicted as driver genes: PIK3CA, KRAS, TRAPPC12, NDN, GOLGA6L4 and BAIAP3. PIK3CA, NDN, GOLGA6L4, and BAIAP3 were recognized as significantly mutated genes (SMGs). HPV was detected in 95% (19/20) of patients with cervical adenocarcinoma, 7 of whom (36.8%) had HPV integration (HPV+ group). In total, 1036 genes with somatic mutations were confirmed in the HPV+ group, while 289 genes with somatic mutations were confirmed in the group without HPV integration (HPV− group); only 2.1% were shared between the two groups. In the HPV+ group, GOLGA6L4 and BAIAP3 were confirmed as SMGs, while PIK3CA, NDN, KRAS, FUT1, and GOLGA6L64 were identified in the HPV− group. ZDHHC3, PKD1P1, and TGIF2 showed copy number amplifications after HPV integration. In addition, the HPV+ group had significantly more neoantigens. HPV integration rather than HPV infection results in different genomic changes in cervical adenocarcinoma.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (9) ◽  
pp. 4900
Author(s):  
Zhixiong Li

Mastocytosis is a type of myeloid neoplasm characterized by the clonal, neoplastic proliferation of morphologically and immunophenotypically abnormal mast cells that infiltrate one or more organ systems. Systemic mastocytosis (SM) is a more aggressive variant of mastocytosis with extracutaneous involvement, which might be associated with multi-organ dysfunction or failure and shortened survival. Over 80% of patients with SM carry the KIT D816V mutation. However, the KIT D816V mutation serves as a weak oncogene and appears to be a late event in the pathogenesis of mastocytosis. The management of SM is highly individualized and was largely palliative for patients without a targeted form of therapy in past decades. Targeted therapy with midostaurin, a multiple kinase inhibitor that inhibits KIT, has demonstrated efficacy in patients with advanced SM. This led to the recent approval of midostaurin by the United States Food and Drug Administration and European Medicines Agency. However, the overall survival of patients treated with midostaurin remains unsatisfactory. The identification of genetic and epigenetic alterations and understanding their interactions and the molecular mechanisms involved in mastocytosis is necessary to develop rationally targeted therapeutic strategies. This review briefly summarizes recent developments in the understanding of SM pathogenesis and potential treatment strategies for patients with SM.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paula Silva‐Rodríguez ◽  
Manuel Bande ◽  
Daniel Fernández‐Díaz ◽  
Nerea Lago‐Baameiro ◽  
María Pardo ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 107 (2) ◽  
pp. 752-759 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karoline V. Gleixner ◽  
Matthias Mayerhofer ◽  
Karl J. Aichberger ◽  
Sophia Derdak ◽  
Karoline Sonneck ◽  
...  

AbstractIn most patients with systemic mastocytosis (SM), including aggressive SM and mast cell leukemia (MCL), neoplastic cells express the oncogenic KIT mutation D816V. KIT D816V is associated with constitutive tyrosine kinase (TK) activity and thus represents an attractive drug target. However, imatinib and most other TK inhibitors fail to block the TK activity of KIT D816V. We show that the novel TK-targeting drugs PKC412 and AMN107 counteract TK activity of D816V KIT and inhibit the growth of Ba/F3 cells with doxycycline-inducible expression of KIT D816V as well as the growth of primary neoplastic mast cells and HMC-1 cells harboring this KIT mutation. PKC412 was a superior agent with median inhibitory concentration (IC50) values of 50 to 250 nM without differences seen between HMC-1 cells exhibiting or lacking KIT D816V. By contrast, AMN107 exhibited more potent effects in KIT D816V- HMC-1 cells. Corresponding results were obtained with Ba/F3 cells exhibiting wild-type or D816V-mutated KIT. The growth-inhibitory effects of PKC412 and AMN107 on HMC-1 cells were associated with induction of apoptosis and down-regulation of CD2 and CD63. PKC412 was found to cooperate with AMN107, imatinib, and cladribine (2CdA) in producing growth inhibition in HMC-1, but synergistic drug interactions were observed only in cells lacking KIT D816V. Together, PKC412 and AMN107 represent promising novel agents for targeted therapy of SM. (Blood. 2006;107: 752-759)


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document