SNP Karyotyping in Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS) Reveals the Presence of Cryptic Karyotypic Abnormalities, Including Uniparental Disomy, and Has Important Prognostic Implications.

Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 853-853 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lukasz P. Gondek ◽  
Abdo Haddad ◽  
Christine O’Keefe ◽  
Ramon Tiu ◽  
Zachary Nearman ◽  
...  

Abstract Using metaphase cytogenetics (MC), chromosomal abnormalities can be found in approximately 50% of patients with MDS (in our cohort (N=356), 46% of patients had normal karyotype by MC), in whom they have important prognostic implications. However, patients with identical lesions, including normal karyotype may show variable clinical behavior. We hypothesized that if a more precise method is used, previously cryptic karyotypic lesions can be found in patients with known aberrations as well as in those with normal MC. High-density SNP arrays (SNP-A) can be used for precise LOH and gene copy number analysis. We have applied this new platform (Affymetrix 250K SNP arrays) to study chromosomal lesions in bone marrow samples from 112 MDS patients, 6 hematologic and 36 healthy controls. Our MDS cohort included patients with RA/RCMD (N=30), RARS/RCMD-RS (N=18), RAEB1/2 and sAML (N=45), and CMML1/2 (N=19); by traditional MC, aberrations of chromosomes 5, 8, 7, and complex karyotypes were present in 13%, 9%, 6% and 8% of patients, respectively. A normal MC exam was obtained in 44% of this sample; in 4% of cases the results were non-informative due to lack of growth. We first applied whole genome scan by SNP-A to establish parameters for minimal pathogenic lesions in healthy controls in whom copy number polymorphisms were easily detectable, but only a limited number of small random defects was found (O’Keefe, ASH 2006). Hematologic controls all showed a normal whole genome scan. However, when this method was applied to MDS patients, chromosomal aberrations were detected in 79% (vs. 52% by MC, p<0.001). Previously unrecognized lesions were detected in both patients with a normal MC test, as well as in those with known lesions. Consequently, a higher proportion of patients showed >1 genomic lesion (e.g. for MC vs. SNP-A, 2 defects in 10/112 vs. 27/112, and ≥3 in 9/112 vs. 31/112, respectively). Newly identified lesions were confirmed by microsatellite and TaqMan PCR copy number analysis in clonal and wt hematopoietic cells. Most significantly, in a proportion of patients, we have identified segmental uniparental disomy (UPD), a lesion resulting in LOH that cannot be detected by MC; it was found in 24% of patients. Most often, UPD involved chromosomes/regions that are frequently affected by loss of genetic material, including chromosome 7q (N=5), 11q (N=5) and 6p (N=3), but also in chromosomes 1 (N=5) and 17 (N=3). As a result, shared areas of LOH were identified in a higher proportion of patients. For example, in addition to known 7/7q deletions (N=7), we have detected 2 new losses involving 7q34 (N=3) and 7q22.1 (N=2) as well as UPD in 7q (N=5), increasing the proportion of patients with aberrant chromosome 7 from 6% by MC to 15% by SNP-A (p<0.03). Clinical analysis of the impact of previously cryptic lesions analogous to those with established adverse prognostic impact (new del7/upd7 or complex) suggests that that SNP-A karyotyping will have clinical utility above and beyond the value of MC. In sum, SNP-A-based karyotyping allows for precise detection of chromosomal lesions in MDS. Previously cryptic defects, including UPD may have clinical and prognostic relevance and help identify genes responsible for the phenotype of the dysplastic clone.

Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 2310-2310
Author(s):  
Elena Serrano ◽  
Vanesa Orantes ◽  
Camino Estivill ◽  
Adriana Lasa ◽  
Salut Brunet ◽  
...  

Abstract Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a heterogeneous group of neoplastic disorders characterized by an abnormal proliferation of the myeloid precursors and a maturation block. A large proportion of AML cases have either a normal karyotype or non-recurrent chromosomal alterations. Underlying genetic lesions of some of these cases have been characterized with the discovery of MLL-internal tandem duplications, activating FLT3 mutations and NPM mutations. Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) derives from the loss of one of the two alleles at a given locus and can be a sign of inactivation of tumor-suppressor genes. We performed a high-resolution genotype analysis on DNA obtained from 19 AML patients with a normal karyotype, both at diagnosis and in samples obtained in complete remission(assessed by multiparametric flow cytometry) using the 10K SNP Array (Affymetrix). Both LOH and copy number analysis, as well as visualization of these analysis were performed by means of the dChip software (M. Lin et al., Bioinformatics (2004), 20:1233–40). A mean call rate of 96.8%. SNP array-based LOH analysis revealed that 4 patients presented large regions of homozygosity at diagnosis which were absent from samples in complete remission. In all four patients copy number analysis indicated no gross chromosomal losses or gains, as was confirmed by conventional cytogenetic analysis. Therefore, it can concluded that the LOH observed in these four patients was due to the presence of uniparental disomy. Simultaneous analysis of FLT-3 internal tandem duplications (FLT-3/ITD), FLT3- D835 mutations, NPM mutations and MLL rearrangements was performed using conventional molecular methods. Two of these patients (UPN2 and UPN12) had FLT-3/ITD in association with NPM mutations. UPN4 had a mutated form of NPM whereas in patient UPN16 FLT-3 and NPM genes were in the germ line configuration. All four cases were negative for MLL rearrangements and FLT-3-D835 mutations. These results suggest that NPM and FLT3 mutations may be associated with acquired somatic recombinations. It remains to be investigated whether there are loci preferentially involved by these events. Uniparental disomy and genetic lesions in normal karyotype AML Patient LOH FLT3 NPM D835 MLL UPN2 13q Mutated Mutated Germ line Germ line UPN4 6pter-p12.212q13.12-qter Germ line Mutated Germ line Germ line UPN12 2p Mutated Mutated Germ line Germ line UPN16 complex Germ line Germ line Germ line Germ line


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 996-996 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manu Gupta ◽  
Manoj Raghavan ◽  
Rosemary E. Gale ◽  
Claude Chelala ◽  
Christopher Allen ◽  
...  

Abstract The recent discovery of acquired uniparental disomy (aUPD) in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has been linked to homozygosity for mutations in certain genes (Raghavan et al, Cancer Res. 2005, Fitzgibbon et al, Cancer Res. 2005). Although this phenomenon, which is undetectable by conventional cytogenetics, has been confirmed in subsequent small-scale studies, its extent and frequency remains uncertain. To determine the frequency and distribution of aUPD, DNA samples from 455 young adult AML patients entered in the UK Medical Research Council AML10 trial were analyzed using Mapping 10K 2.0 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) arrays (Affymetrix Inc.). Genomic DNA from blood samples of ten non-leukemic individuals was used as control to estimate the copy number values (control set I). We defined aUPD as 50 consecutive homozygous markers but allowed 2 heterozygous calls to accommodate contaminating normal tissue. Using this criterion a false positive rate of 3.3% was calculated from an available data of 90 independent controls (control set I). Overall, 120 regions of UPD were observed in 79 AML cases (17%), 87% of which involved at least one breakpoint, i.e. resulted from mitotic recombination, and 13% were whole chromosome aUPDs arising from chromosomal non-disjunction. They were the sole aberration, as detected by SNP arrays, in 61 samples (13%), and 84% of these had only a single region of aUPD. There was a non-random distribution across chromosomes; 13q (n=18 cases), 11p (n=8) and 11q (n=9) were the most frequently affected. Other chromosomes with regions of recurrent aUPD were 2p (n=7), 2q (n=6), 1p (n=5), 19q (n=4), 17q12–q21.2 (n=4), 21q (n=4), 9p (n=3), Xq (n=3), 6p (n=2), and 17p (n=2). Acquired UPDs were observed across all cytogenetic risk groups: in 25% of adverse risk patients, 11% of favorable risk, 19% of normal karyotype and 10% of the remaining intermediate risk patients. Samples with aUPD13q (5% of samples) belonged exclusively to the intermediate risk group. Chromosome 13 was the only chromosome to show recurrent whole chromosome aUPD. Fifteen samples with aUPD13q covered the region of the FLT3 gene at 13q12.2; all 15 had a FLT3-internal tandem duplication (ITD) and all cases with a high FLT3-ITD mutant level > 50% of total had 13q aUPD. Gains and losses were observed in 12% and 14% of the samples respectively. As expected, gains on chromosome 8 and losses on chromosomes 5 and 7 were common, confirming the general utility of this approach. No homozygous losses were observed. Comparison of arrays with cytogenetic analysis showed that additional information (aUPDs and/or copy number changes) was obtained in 23% of cases with a normal karyotype and 38% of cases without available cytogenetics. This study highlights the importance of aUPD in the development of AML and pinpoints regions that may contain novel mutational targets.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 2350-2350
Author(s):  
Lukasz P. Gondek ◽  
Abdo Haddad ◽  
Mikkael A. Sekeres ◽  
Yasuhito Nannya ◽  
Seishi Ogawa ◽  
...  

Abstract Chromosome abnormalities in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) have important prognostic implications. The frequent occurrence of certain invariant aberrations implies a role of involved genes in the malignant phenotype of the affected clone. The recent therapeutic success of lenalidomide (CC-5013, Revlimid® ) in achieving cytogenetic remissions in a high proportion of patients with the 5q deletion suggests that certain chromosomal lesions may be used to guide targeted molecular therapeutics. Nevertheless, traditional metaphase cytogenetics (MC) has limited resolution and is hampered by frequent lack of growth in vitro. Due to the inherent insensitivity of banding techniques ( > 20% of abnormal metaphases), only large clones can be detected. Significance of FISH-based detection of a few karyotypically abnormal cells remains unclear as smaller clones may be transient and therefore not pathogenic. Whole genome scan using SNP arrays (SNP-A) allows for precise detection of cryptic (due to limited size) defects by simultaneous analysis of LOH and gene copy number. Unlike MC, uniparental disomy (UPD) can be easily detected by SNP-A. The resolution level of this technology is limited only by the density of the arrays; currently 500K SNP-A are readily available. We hypothesized that the application of SNP-A in MDS will allow for the detection of "marker" lesions located within chromosomal regions frequently affected in MDS. In patients with deletion 5q, standard MC analyses have shown that additional chromosome abnormalities impart an incremental adverse prognosis in the absence of marrow blast elevation, suggesting that detection of occult lesions may have immediate prognostic relevance. Here, we applied 250K Affymetrix SNP-A for bone marrow karyotyping. Results were confirmed using microsatellite analysis. Initially, we have analyzed a cohort of 356 MDS patients, 43 patients had losses of genomic material in chromosome 5. While studying a subset of patients (N=112) from this cohort by SNP-A, we confirmed 13/15 previously known 5q31 deletions. In addition, we identified 2 patients with aberrations involving this region that were not detected by MC. One patient had a segmental UPD5q23.3-q31.1, likely due to mitotic recombination, while the second patient with uninformative cytogenetics had a new deletion within 5q. The affected regions involved the cytokine gene cluster at 5q31. The SNP-A-based whole genome scan of patients with previously known 5q aberrations as the sole MC-defined abnormality detected additional deletions present in other chromosomes in 3/7 patients. These lesions were located at 1p21.1, 2q21.2, 4q23, 6p21.33, 7q34, 8q24.23 and 11p15.1. Our findings may point towards rational application of lenalidomide in patients who would otherwise not be primary targets of such therapy. Moreover, as the response rate to lenalidomide is not complete and some patients may relapse, it is possible that detection of certain occult defects using SNP-A may point towards lenalidomide resistance or modify clinical features in individual patients.


2012 ◽  
Vol 154 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Jandova ◽  
J. Klukowska-Rötzler ◽  
G. Dolf ◽  
J. Janda ◽  
P. Roosje ◽  
...  

2009 ◽  
Vol 84 (2) ◽  
pp. 279-285 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian E. Asher ◽  
Janine A. Lamb ◽  
Denise Brocklebank ◽  
Jean-Baptiste Cazier ◽  
Elena Maestrini ◽  
...  

2001 ◽  
Vol 79 (9) ◽  
pp. 2320 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Hirooka ◽  
D J de Koning ◽  
B Harlizius ◽  
J A van Arendonk ◽  
A P Rattink ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 3827-3827
Author(s):  
María Abáigar ◽  
Eva Lumbreras ◽  
Irene Rodríguez ◽  
Javier Sánchez-del-Real ◽  
María Díez-Campelo ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3827 Background: Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are a heterogeneous group of hematological disorders in which diagnosis, risk stratification, and treatment selection are based on morphological and cytogenetic studies in bone marrow (BM) samples. MDS are characterized by several recurrent chromosomal abnormalities, most of them unbalanced, with a widely variable prognosis. The assessment of these genomic defects is essential for a correct risk stratification of these patients. However, conventional cytogenetic (CC) techniques are not sufficient for the study of all MDS patients, because of the high proportion of normal karyotypes (40–50%) and unsuccessful cytogenetics (10%) (defined as the absence of mitosis). Array-based comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) technology allows the screening of copy number changes among the whole genome in one single experiment and offers a higher resolution than conventional cytogenetics. Aims: To assess the potential application of aCGH in the clinical diagnosis of MDS as complementary tool to conventional cytogenetics. Patients and Methods: The study cohort comprises a total of 263 patients: MDS (203) and MDS/MPN (60) patients that have been previously studied by CC and FISH. Among the whole series, 33 (12.5%) patients had no successful cytogenetic results due to the absence of mitosis. In the remaining 230 patients with evaluable metaphases, 42 (16%) had an aberrant, while 188 (71.5%) presented a normal karyotype. Within this last group, 141 had ≥20 good-quality metaphases evaluated, 37 had 10–20 metaphases studied, and 10 patients had ≤10 successful metaphases. Copy number changes were analysed in all patients included in the study using NimbleGen Human CGH 12×135K Whole-Genome Tiling Array (Roche NimbleGen). Sex-matched human commercial DNA samples were used as reference. Data were analysed using the segMNT algorithm in NimbleScanv2.6 Software. Subsequently all genomic abnormalities found by aCGH analysis were confirmed by FISH. Results: Using aCGH methodology, copy number changes (greater than 600 bp) were detected in 54 patients of the global series: 4.3% of the normal karyotype patients, 88.1% of cases with abnormal cytogenetics, and 27.3% of patients with unsuccessful cytogenetics. Overall a high correlation (94.3%) between the cytogenetic changes observed by CC and CGH arrays was observed. Thus aCGH analysis revealed the same genomic abnormalities showed by CC in 88.1% of patients. In the remaining 11.9% genomic results were discordant between aCGH and CC, because of the presence of balanced translocations, not assessable by aCGH, and clonal cell populations below 30%. Furthermore, additional genomic abnormalities (n=36) not detected by CC were found by aCGH. The most frequent aberrations were losses affecting chromosomes 5 (33%), 7/7q (17%), 20q (14%), and Y (14%), as well as gains involving chromosome 8 (14%). Interestingly, other abnormalities, mainly losses, were found in chromosomes 4, 12, and 17. Focusing on the 188 patients with normal karyotype by CC, the aCGH profiling results were concordant with cytogenetics in 98% of those patients with ≥20 metaphases studied and in 92% of those with 10–20 metaphases. However, only 80% of those patients with ≤10 successful metaphases and no changes by CC displayed no copy number changes by aCGH. The most frequent abnormality found by aCGH among these normal karyotype cases was the presence of 5q deletion (2%), while other chromosomes affected were 7, 8, 11, 12 and 20. All these abnormalities were confirmed by FISH. Regarding the patients with unsuccessful cytogenetics, 72.7% of cases displayed a normal aCGH profile, while 27.3% showed at least one genomic imbalance The most frequent genomic aberrations were losses in 4q (6%), 5q (12%) and 7q (9%), and gain of chromosome 8 (6%). In addition, three of these cases showed a complex karyotype, showing more than 5 abnormalities. Conclusion: The use of aCGH karyotyping in the diagnosis of MDS could be used as a complementary technique to conventional karyotyping in the evaluation of MDS patients. Mainly in patients with unsuccessful cytogenetics and those with normal karyotype and <20 good-quality metaphases evaluated. Disclosures: Hernández: Celgene: Research Funding.


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