Diagnostic Potential of Immunophenotyping CD34+ Cells in Myelodysplastic Syndromes.

Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 4836-4836
Author(s):  
Marc De Waele ◽  
Barbara Leus ◽  
Fabienne Trullemans ◽  
Inge Verschraegen ◽  
Montse Urbino ◽  
...  

Abstract Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) constitute a heterogeneous group of clonal hematopoeitic stem cell disorders. They are characterized by abnormal bone marrow differentiation, peripheral blood cytopenia and a risk of transformation into acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The diagnosis of MDS depends on cytomorphology and cytogenetics and may be difficult especially in cases with normal numbers of blasts and without ringed sideroblasts in the bone marrow. Cytomorphology is subjective and dysplastic features may be present in other disorders than MDS. In this study we examined the potential of immunophenotyping CD34+ hematopoietic precursors for the diagnosis and classification of MDS. Bone marrow samples of 31 patients with low grade MDS (21 without and 10 with ringed sideroblasts), of 17 patients with refractory anemia with excess of blasts (RAEB), of 25 patients with AML and of 39 patients with cytopenia not due to MDS (controls) were examined. CD34+ cells were enumerated and the expression of B cell antigens (CD19), of myeloid antigens (CD13, CD33, CD117) and of immature antigens (CD133) was determined by flow cytometry. Statistical analysis was done with a Mann-Whitney test. A high number of CD34+ cells was found in MDS and AML. This was accompanied by an increase of the number of myeloid precursors and a decrease of the B cell precursors. CD117 appeared to be the best marker of myeloid precursors followed by CD13. A wide range of CD34+CD133+ and of CD34+CD33+ cells was found in all types of samples. Forty percent of the patients with low grade MDS showed an increased expression of CD117 on their CD34+ cells. In 25% of the cases without ringed sideroblasts a high expression of CD133 was present. Similar changes were more frequently found in RAEB and AML together with an increased expression of CD13 and CD33 and a low positivity for CD19. With a scoring system based on the expression of these antigens 57% of low grade MDS samples (score 1/6 or 2/6) could be distinguished from the controls (score 0/6). An elevated score was also found in respectively 84% and 100% of the RAEB and AML samples. 85% of them even had a score between 3/6 and 6/6. In conclusion, immunophenotyping of CD34+ cells is able to differentiate 60% of low grade MDS samples from other causes of cytopenia. Increased expression of CD117, CD133 and CD34 are the main differences. Similar changes are even more frequently found in RAEB and AML. A scoring system based on the antigen expression on the CD34+ cells is a powerful tool for the diagnosis and classification of MDS.

Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 2371-2371
Author(s):  
Hesham M. Amin ◽  
Sherry A. Pierce ◽  
Hagop M. Kantarjian ◽  
Michael J. Keating ◽  
Emil J. Freireich ◽  
...  

Abstract According to the FAB and WHO classifications, the diagnosis of acute erythroid leukemia is based on the numbers of nucleated red blood cells and myeloid blasts in the bone marrow. The WHO classification recognizes two types of acute erythroid leukemia; M6A with 51–80% erythroid precursors and with 20% or more of the non-erythroid precursors being myeloid blasts; and M6B with more than 80% of the nucleated cells in the bone marrow consisting of erythroid precursors, regardless of the percentage of the myeloid blasts. Previous studies have shown that many cases of acute erythroid leukemia arise in patients with a history of myelodysplastic syndrome and in other cases acute erythroid leukemia is associated with significant dysplastic features. The significance of the number of erythroid precursors is not well known in the myelodysplastic syndromes. In the present study, we included 617 consecutive patients with low-grade myelodysplasia (482 patients with refractory anemia [RA] and 135 patients with refractory anemia with ringed sideroblasts [RARS]). Among this group, 82 patients with 50% or more of erythroid precursors had shorter survival compared with 535 patients with less than 50% erythroid precursors (P < .01; Figure 1). The shorter survival in those with 50% or more of erythroid precursors may reflect the tendency of these patients to have worse International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS) scores. Thus, among the patients with less than 50% erythroid precursors and primary MDS, 35% were IPSS low, 52% IPSS intermediate 1, and 13% IPSS intermediate 2. For the patients with 50% or more of erythroid precursors, the corresponding proportions were 14%, 57%, and 29%, respectively (P < .001). As a result of the association between IPSS and the percentage of erythroid precursors, the percentage of erythroid precursors had no effect on survival within individual IPSS groups. Similarly, the percentage of erythroid precursors had no prognostic significance in patients with refractory anemia with excess blasts (RAEB) or chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML). Our findings demonstrate that in low-grade dysplasia (RA and RARS) the number of erythroid precursors may represent an important prognostic marker. These findings implicate that the percentage of erythroid precursors should be considered in the classification of the low-grade myelodysplastic syndromes. A multivariate analysis will be performed to ascertain the relative effects of IPSS score and the percentage of erythroid precursors on prognosis in patients with low-grade myelodysplasia. Figure Figure


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 3634-3634
Author(s):  
Kiyoyuki Ogata ◽  
Matteo G. Della Porta ◽  
Luca Malcovati ◽  
Cristina Picone ◽  
Norio Yokose ◽  
...  

Abstract Findings of recent studies indicate that flow cytometry (FCM) may be valuable in the diagnosis and prognostication of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). This approach appears particularly promising in patients with low-risk MDS without ringed sideroblasts and excess of blasts (i.e., with refractory anemia tout court) who have normal karyotype. These patients lack in fact any specific morphological or cytogenetic marker. However, the analytical methods reported so far require considerable technical skill, and therefore FCM has not yet become a routine procedure in the work-up of MDS patients. In this work, we developed a simple, reproducible FCM protocol for MDS and tested its validity prospectively. This study has been approved by the Ethics Committee, Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo, Pavia, Italy and by the Institutional Review Board of Nippon Medical School. The cytological diagnosis of MDS was made according to the WHO criteria by two independent cytologists who were blinded to clinical data. Three-color FCM was conducted at two laboratories (Tokyo and Pavia), which had received the details of the analytical method beforehand. The FCM protocol was developed in Tokyo and a part of which was reported previously (Leuk Res, 2008 32(5):699–707). The mandatory FCM parameters were CD34+ myeloblasts (% in all nucleated cells), CD34+ B-cell progenitors (% in all CD34+ cells), CD45 expression of CD34+ myeloblasts, and side scatter of mature myeloid cells. The optional parameters were CD11b, CD15, and CD56 expressions on CD34+ myeloblasts. These seven parameters were quantitatively analyzed and their reference ranges (RR) were determined using data from the cohort reported previously (Blood. 2006; 108(3): 1037–44). Bone marrow samples from 80 MDS patients with refractory anemia and normal karyotype, and from 82 controls were analyzed. Controls are patients who underwent routine diagnostic procedures for cytopenia and were eventually found to have conditions other than MDS and other clonal diseases. Abnormal data (outside the RR) in 2 or more parameters were common in MDS and were observed in 7 of 24 (29%) Japanese patients and 37 of 56 (66%) Italian patients when the four mandatory parameters alone were analyzed, and in 16 of 24 (67%) Japanese patients and 40 of 46 (87%) Italian patients when all seven parameters were analyzed (56 of 70 [80%] in total). A decreased CD34+ B-cell progenitor was the most common abnormality. By contrast, the occurrence of abnormalities in 2 or more FCM parameters was rare in control patients and was observed in 5 of 82 (6%) patients when all seven parameters were analyzed (56/70 versus 5/82, P < .0001). Therefore, when bone marrow samples lacking ringed sideroblasts and blast excess, and having normal karyotype show 2 or more abnormal FCM parameters, the likelihood ratio of MDS is 13.1 (95% confidence interval [CI], 6.4 to 29.3): the diagnostic sensitivity and specificity were 80% (95% CI, 74 to 84%) and 94% (95% CI, 89 to 97%), respectively. In conclusion, the findings of this study strongly indicate that the adopted FCM protocol is feasible and useful for diagnosing MDS in patients who lack specific morphological or cytogenetic markers.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 1432-1432
Author(s):  
Alessandro Levis ◽  
L. Godio ◽  
M. Girotto ◽  
M. Bonferroni ◽  
T. Callegari ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND. TheWHO classification of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) is based on the evaluation of bone marrow morphology. The two categories of REAB-I and RAEB-II are apparently easy to differentiate on the basis of bone marrow blast percent. However there are no so far data about the differences among cytology, histology and immunophenotypic evaluation of blasts in order to discrimante non-RAEB from RAEB-I and RAEB-II categories. PATIENTS AND METHODS. The Piemonte MDS Registry was born in 1999 thanks to the cooperation of both Haematology and Internal Medicine departments of our region, with the following aims: a) to follow homogeneous guidelines in diagnosis and treatment of MDS; b) to collect epidemiological and clinical information on a large group of patients; c) to cryopreserve bone marrow cells for molecular biology studies. When obtaining an informed consent, data of patients were prospectively centrally recorded through our web site. A retrospective analysis on differences in diagnosing RAEB, comparing conventional cytology on bone marrow smears (CBM), histochemical evaluation of CD34+ cells on bone marrow trephine biopsy (HBM), and cytofluorimetric count of CD34+ and CD117+ cells (IBM) has been done. RESULTS. From June 1999 to December 2003, 633 MDS patients were registered from 37 different institutions: 364 (57%) from haematology and/or academic institutions and 269 (43%) from internal medicine departments of community hospitals. Mean age was 72 (range 23–69). The actual diagnostic distribution of cases according to the WHO criteria based on only morphology evaluation of bone marrow smears was: non-RAEB 429 (68%), RAEB-I 134 (21%), and RAEB-II 70 (11%). Information about the quantification of blasts with both CBM and HBM techniques was avilable in 243 cases. An IBM evaluation was also available in 89 out of this 243 cases. A disagreement between CBM and HBM was evident in 65/243 cases (27%), with HBM over-evaluating and under-evaluating WHO class on the basis of blasts count in 54/243 (22%) and 11/243 cases respectively. When comparing CBM and IBM the disagreement was even higher in 29/89 cases (33%), with IBM over-evaluating blast percent in 9 (10%) and under-evaluating it in 20 cases (23%). The disagreement betwen HBM and IBM was maximum with a value of 39%. The role of CBM in predicting a different prognosis of non-RAEB, RAEB-I and RAEB-II was confirmed. However, when comparing the prognostic value of the three different methods of computing bone marrow blasts, IBM was the best in order to define the good prognostic non-RAEB group. CONCLUSIONS. The distinction among non-RAEB, RAEB-I and RAEB-II is far from beeing highly accurate and reproducible. Important differences are present among CBM, HBM and IBM. While CBM remain the conventional standard system, IBM could offer a tool better and more reproducible than CBM in order to define MDS categories on the basis of blast percentage. A large multicenter study could be useful in order to clarify this point.


Hematology ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 2006 (1) ◽  
pp. 199-204 ◽  
Author(s):  
James W. Vardiman

Abstract Although the diagnosis and classification of most cases of the myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) is usually accomplished without difficulty, a minority of cases may pose diagnostic problems. In many cases the diagnostic dilemma can be solved by adhering to basic guidelines recommended for evaluation of patients suspected of having MDS, and in particular to the quality of the blood and bone marrow specimens submitted for morphologic, immunophenotypic and genetic studies. In other cases, such as patients who have hypocellular MDS or MDS with fibrosis, the criteria for making a diagnosis may be difficult if not impossible to apply, and in still others the diagnostic uncertainty is because the minimal criteria necessary to establish the diagnosis of MDS are not always clearly stated. In this review, some of these diagnostic problems are addressed and some general guidelines for resolving them are suggested. In addition, data are presented that illustrate that the WHO classification offers a valuable tool in the diagnosis and classification of MDS.


2000 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 71-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
Audrey S. Baur ◽  
Christiane Meugé-Moraw ◽  
Pierre-Michel Schmidt ◽  
Valérie Parlier ◽  
Martine Jotterand ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 2774-2774
Author(s):  
Alexandros Makis ◽  
Stefanos I Papadhimitriou ◽  
John P Panagiotou ◽  
Agapi Parcharidou ◽  
Vassilios Papadakis ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2774 Poster Board II-750 Background-Aim. De novo myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) arise in previously healthy children, however congenital physical abnormalities often accompanying the disease, strengthen the assumption that predisposing genetic lesions may contribute to the disturbance of hematopoiesis. In our series of Greek Pediatric patients, emphasis is given to the possible clinical correlation of classifiable and unclassifiable coexisting congenital disorders to the pathogenesis of MDS. Patients and Methods. Thirty children with primary MDS (mean age 7.5 y) and 10 familial cases (mean age 8.1 y) were consecutively diagnosed and treated during a period of 21 y (1988–2009). Diagnosis was based on clinical manifestations, morphology of peripheral blood, marrow aspirate and bone marrow trephine and conventional and molecular cytogenetic analysis of bone marrow cells. Patients with secondary MDS on a background of inherited, well characterized, bone marrow failure syndrome were excluded. Results. Thirty two children had refractory cytopenia (RC), 2 refractory anemia with excess of blasts (RAEB) and 6 refractory anemia with excess blasts in transformation (RAEB-T). Dysplastic features of the erythroid, myeloid and megakaryocytic lineage were detected at marrow aspirates in 77.5%, 42.5% and 72.5% of the patients, respectively, while decreased cellularity was found at bone trephine in 25/40 patients (65%). Several chromosomal aberrations were revealed in 18/40 patients: monosomy 7 in 6 children (2 RC, 1 RAEB, 3 RAEB-T), 5q- in 1 (RC), del(20)(q13) in 1 (RC), hypodiploidy in 1 (RAEB-T), inv(8)(p32q12) in 1 (RC), inv(9)(p12q13) in 1 (RC), 1qh+ in 4 (RC), trisomy 8 in 1 (RC) and complex abnormalities in 2 (RAEB-T). Treatment modalities included: Allo HCST in 13 children (9 RC, 1 RAEB, 3 RAEB-T), immunosuppression in 2 (RC), chemotherapy in 2 (RAEB-T), supportive care in 12 (10 RC, 1 RAEB, 1 RAEB-T 1) and “watch and wait” strategy in 11 (all RC). The 5-year survival for primary MDS and familial cases was 78 % and 67% respectively, while for RC cases was 90% and for RAEB/RAEB/T 15%. Physical abnormalities were identified in 16/40 patients (40%) (13/32 RC, 3/8 RAEB/RAEB-T), among whom 14 patients were characterized as having: Naxos disease 2; Velocardiofacial-like syndrome 2; Löwe syndrome 1; Congenital lymphoedema 1; Hemifacial microsomia 1; Immunodeficiency, centromeric region instability, and facial anomalies-like syndrome (ICF-like) 1; Cornelia De Lange's syndrome 1; Dandy Walker syndrome 1 and complex, unclassifiable abnormalities 6. The genes of these disorders are known to be located close to genes implicated in normal or malignant hematopoiesis or involved in chromosomal aberrations often seen in hematological malignancies (Table). Conclusions Low grade MDS prevailed among the primary or familial MDS, in our series. Physical abnormalities were common and classifiable or unclassifiable genetic disorders were identified in both low grade and advanced MDS. We hypothesize that the genes of some of these disorders could be directly or indirectly involved in hemopoiesis/oncogenesis either by being located close to genes implicated in normal or malignant hemopoiesis, or involved in chromosomal aberrations often seen in hematological malignancies. However, to clarify whether these or other underlying genetic abnormalities may be regarded as initiating or contributing events/mechanisms for MDS in childhood, requires further specific and well-planned basic and clinical studies. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (17) ◽  
pp. 3538-3545 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luca Malcovati ◽  
Matteo G. Della Porta ◽  
Daniela Pietra ◽  
Emanuela Boveri ◽  
Andrea Pellagatti ◽  
...  

Abstract We studied patients with myeloid neoplasm associated with ringed sideroblasts and/or thrombocytosis. The combination of ringed sideroblasts 15% or greater and platelet count of 450 × 109/L or greater was found in 19 subjects fulfilling the diagnostic criteria for refractory anemia with ringed sideroblasts (RARS) associated with marked thrombocytosis (RARS-T), and in 3 patients with primary myelofibrosis. JAK2 and MPL mutations were detected in circulating granulocytes and bone marrow CD34+ cells, but not in T lymphocytes, from 11 of 19 patients with RARS-T. Three patients with RARS, who initially had low to normal platelet counts, progressed to RARS-T, and 2 of them acquired JAK2 (V617F) at this time. In female patients with RARS-T, granulocytes carrying JAK2 (V617F) represented only a fraction of clonal granulocytes as determined by X-chromosome inactivation patterns. RARS and RARS-T patient groups both consistently showed up-regulation of ALAS2 and down-regulation of ABCB7 in CD34+ cells, but several other genes were differentially expressed, including PSIP1 (LEDGF), CXCR4, and CDC2L5. These observations suggest that RARS-T is indeed a myeloid neoplasm with both myelodysplastic and myeloproliferative features at the molecular and clinical levels and that it may develop from RARS through the acquisition of somatic mutations of JAK2, MPL, or other as-yet-unknown genes.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 5010-5010
Author(s):  
Lucja Kachel ◽  
Jerzy Holowiecki

Abstract To identify the factors influencing hematopoetic cell collection we performed an analysis of a group of patients with uniform diagnosis treated in single center. Patients and methods: For this study we selected out of 1205 transplantation procedures performed in our department a group of 80 patients with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL): M/F 42/38, median age 38,5, 17–66 y, who underwent peripheral blood progenitor cell (PBPC) harvest and autologous hematopoetic cell transplantation. The histological NHL subtypes were as follows: -follicular (n=13), -mantle cell (n=2), -small lymphocytic (n=9), -diffuse large B-cell (n=23), -lymphoblastic (n=11), -anaplastic (n=11) and other subtypes (n=11). The involvement of bone marrow at diagnosis or in relapse was proved in 27 patients. Most patients were heavily pretreated: the median time from diagnosis to mobilization was 12,5 months (3,7–70,8). The median number of different chemotherapy regimens was 2 (1–7) and the med. no. of chemotherapy cycles equaled to 9 (3–30). 34 patients received in addition radiation therapy. At the time of PBPC mobilization, 30 patients were in 1st remission (CR), 7 were in ≥2nd CR; 41 patients were in PR and 2 in relapse. Mobilization and harvesting procedures. In 27 patients pre-mobilization chemotherapy consisted of a single high dose of cyclophosphamide - 4,g/m2, 40 patients received IVE (Ifosfamide 3g/m2/d 1–3, Etoposide 0,2g/m2/d 1–3, epirubicine 0,05g/m2/d 1) and 10 patients were given other regimens: Cladribine, COP, F-MACHOP, Mtx, DHAP. Five days after the last chemotherapy dose G-CSF was started at 10mg/kg/day sc and continued until the last day of collection. Apheresis was performed using CS 3000 cell separators. The goal of this study was to determine factor associated with poor number of collected CD34+ cells. The following end-points were taken into account: &lt;1.0x106 CD34+ cells/kg collected on the first day of harvest, &lt;1.0x106 CD34+ cells/kg after two days of harvest, &lt;1.0, &lt;2.5, &lt;5.0x106 CD34+ cells/kg after one entire harvesting procedure. Following variables were analyzed for their impact on the harvest efficacy: sex, age, histological subtype, bone marrow involvement, number of different chemotherapy regimens, number of chemotherapy cycles, adjuvant radiation therapy, chemotherapy scoring system (Drake M), scoring system of myelotoxic chemotherapy (Vantelon JM), time from diagnosis to mobilization, disease status at mobilization and mobilization regimen. Results: Univariate analysis selected the factors associated with unsuccessful harvest (p&lt;0.05) as follows: bone marrow involvement at any time prior to mobilization, diagnosis of low grade lymphoma, a high number of chemotherapy regimens and cycles, additional radiation therapy, type of mobilization regimen (others vs IVE). The subsequent multivariate analysis identified following adverse risk factors: low grade NHL (p 0.01–0.004), bone marrow involvement at any time of treatment (p=0.01–0.002), B line NHL (p=0.04–0.009), number of therapy regimens &gt;2 (p=0.03–0.0001), radiation therapy (p=0.01–0.02), scoroing system of myelotoxic chemotherapy (p=0.02–0.03), mobilization other then IVE (p=0.02–0.0007). Like in our earlier study IVE was found the most effective pre-mobilization regimen Conclusions: The factors associated with poor mobilization of peripheral blood progenitors in this study were: low grade lymphoma, bone marrow involvement, heavy pretreatment and mobilization regimen other then IVE.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (3) ◽  
pp. 1037-1044 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kiyoyuki Ogata ◽  
Yoshifumi Kishikawa ◽  
Chikako Satoh ◽  
Hideto Tamura ◽  
Kazuo Dan ◽  
...  

Abstract The diagnosis of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) without an increase in blasts and ringed sideroblasts (low-grade MDS without ringed sideroblasts [LGw/oRS]) may be problematic because dysplastic features are not specific to MDS and approximately 50% of patients with LGw/oRS lack chromosomal aberrations. Here, we report the usefulness of flow cytometric characteristics of CD34+ cells for LGw/oRS diagnosis. Bone marrow cells from LGw/oRS patients and controls (eg, cytopenic individuals without MDS) were analyzed using 4-color flow cytometry (FCM). We objectively determined reference ranges of 13 parameters related to CD34+ cells with data from controls. In LGw/oRS patients, various abnormalities of CD34+ cells—eg, decrease in CD34+ B-cell precursors, aberrant expression or overexpression of various antigens on CD34+ myeloblasts—were observed. We constructed a reproducible, flow cytometric scoring system for LGw/oRS diagnosis. High scores were observed in 16 of 27 LGw/oRS patients, regardless of the presence or absence of chromosomal aberrations, but not in any of the 90 controls. Among LGw/oRS patients with chromosomal aberrations, patients with trisomy 8 or del20(q) had low FCM scores (P = .002). As a result, most LGw/oRS patients were identified based on high FCM score, chromosomal aberration, or both.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. SCI-22-SCI-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elli Papaemmanuil

Abstract Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are clonal stem cell neoplasms affecting patients usually over 60 years old that typically present into the clinic with common symptoms including cytopenias, recurrent infections, bleeding and bruising. Approximately 20-30% of MDS patients progress to acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and are associated with inferior survival1. Diagnosis of MDS relies on findings from peripheral blood counts, examination of bone marrow morphology and evaluation of cytogenetic profiles for chromosomal aberrations. Using the WHO 2008 criteria, the proportion of blasts in the bone marrow, the number of cell lineages affected and the presence of del(5q) are collectively evaluated to classify patients into one of the five MDS categories [refractory anemia, refractory anemia with ring sideroblasts, refractory cytopenia multilineage dysplasia, refractory anemia with excess blasts, MDS with del(5q)]. The International Prognostication Scoring System (IPSS & IPSS-R) is the most widely used prognostic system in MDS. IPSS utilizes morphological variables to assign patients into low, intermediate or high-risk groups2. Accurate classification into one of these prognostic categories is critical as it determines selection of therapy regimes. Recent systematic profiling screens of MDS genomes have unraveled a complex network of cellular pathways that are causally implicated in MDS pathogenesis. Mutations have now been characterized in a number of key components of the spliceosome machinery (SF3B1, SRSF2, U2AF1, U2AF2, ZRSR2), regulators of DNA methylation (DNMT3A, IDH1, IDH2, TET2), chromatin modification (ASXL1, EZH2), transcription (EVI1, RUNX1, GATA2), signal transduction (NRAS, JAK2, KRAS, CBL) and cell cycle control (TP53)3-9. Collectively, more than 40 genes are significantly mutated in MDS; these mutations account for nearly 90% of MDS patients. The majority of patients present with two or more oncogenic mutations at diagnosis, and significant patterns of gene-gene interactions and mutual exclusivity have been reported10,11. Systematic integration of mutation data with large and well-annotated clinical datasets offers an unprecedented opportunity to decipher both the diagnostic as well as prognostic potential of these mutations as clinical biomarkers. However, the underlying genetic heterogeneity imposes significant challenges and important considerations that need to be accounted for when interpreting observed correlations between genotype, morphology and patient outcome. To unravel the interlocking genetic heterogeneity in MDS, Bejar et al., Papaemmanuil et al., and Haferlach et al. have studied the prevalence of acquired gene mutations in MDS and closely related chronic myeloid neoplasms in ~ 2100 MDS patients with well-annotated diagnostic and clinical outcome variables10-12. Univariate analysis has identified more than 10 genes to be significantly correlated with clinical outcome, including SF3B1, SRSF2, ASXL1, RUNX1, TP53, BCOR, RUNX1, EZH2, IDH2, ZRSR2, U2AF1 and CUX1. The total number of oncogenic mutations identified in each patient is selected as one of the most significant genetic predictors of outcome. Mutations in gene components of the spliceosome machinery are observed in approximately 50% of MDS patients, identifying pre-mRNA splicing as the most frequently altered biological process in MDS. Additionally, clonal relationship analysis of these mutations identifies that mutations in splicing genes occur early, followed by mutations in preferred partner genes, and mutations in different genes of the spliceosome machinery are associated with distinct morphological classification groups. The present talk will provide an overview of our current understanding of the underlying molecular mechanisms that underpin MDS biology. It will also evaluate how the genetic architecture of MDS can be incorporated in developing reliable and informative patient classification as well as outcome prediction models that can support clinical decision making in the future. References: 1. Tefferi A, Vardiman JW. Myelodysplastic syndromes. N Engl J Med. 2009;361(19):1872-1885. 2. Greenberg PL, Tuechler H, Schanz J, et al. Revised International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS-R) for myelodysplastic syndromes. Blood. 2012. 3. Yoshida K, Sanada M, Shiraishi Y, et al. Frequent pathway mutations of splicing machinery in myelodysplasia. Nature. 2011;478(7367):64-69. 4. Graubert TA, Shen D, Ding L, et al. Recurrent mutations in the U2AF1 splicing factor in myelodysplastic syndromes. Nat Genet. 2012;44(1):53-57. 5. Ernst T, Chase AJ, Score J, et al. Inactivating mutations of the histone methyltransferase gene EZH2 in myeloid disorders. Nat Genet. 2010;42(8):722-726. 6. Ley TJ, Ding L, Walter MJ, et al. DNMT3A mutations in acute myeloid leukemia. N Engl J Med. 2010;363(25):2424-2433. 7. Mardis ER, Ding L, Dooling DJ, et al. Recurring mutations found by sequencing an acute myeloid leukemia genome. N Engl J Med. 2009;361(11):1058-1066. 8. Gelsi-Boyer V, Trouplin V, Adelaide J, et al. Mutations of polycomb-associated gene ASXL1 in myelodysplastic syndromes and chronic myelomonocytic leukaemia. Br J Haematol. 2009;145(6):788-800. 9. Shih AH, Levine RL. Molecular biology of myelodysplastic syndromes. Semin Oncol. 2011;38(5):613-620. 10. Haferlach T, Nagata Y, Grossmann V, et al. Landscape of genetic lesions in 944 patients with myelodysplastic syndromes. Leukemia. 2014;28(2):241-247. 11. Papaemmanuil E, Gerstung M, Malcovati L, et al. Clinical and biological implications of driver mutations in myelodysplastic syndromes. Blood. 2013;122(22):3616-3627; quiz 3699. 12. Bejar R, Stevenson K, Abdel-Wahab O, et al. Clinical effect of point mutations in myelodysplastic syndromes. N Engl J Med. 2011;364(26):2496-2506. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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