1. KMT2D mutations and TP53 disruptions are poor prognostic biomarkers in mantle cell lymphoma receiving high-dose therapy: a FIL study
- Author
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Simone Ferrero, Davide Rossi, Andrea Rinaldi, Alessio Bruscaggin, Valeria Spina, Christian W. Eskelund, Andrea Evangelista, Riccardo Moia, Ivo Kwee, Christina Dahl, Alice Di Rocco, Vittorio Stefoni, Fary Diop, Chiara Favini, Paola Ghione, Abdurraouf Mokhtar Mahmoud, Mattia Schipani, Arne Kolstad, Daniela Barbero, Domenico Novero, Marco Paulli, Alberto Zamò, Mats Jerkeman, Maria Gomes da Silva, Armando Santoro, Annalia Molinari, Andres Ferreri, Kirsten Grønbæk, Andrea Piccin, Sergio Cortelazzo, Francesco Bertoni, Marco Ladetto, and Gianluca Gaidano
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
In recent years, the outcome of mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) has improved, especially in younger patients, receiving cytarabine-containing chemoimmunotherapy and autologous stem cell transplantation. Nevertheless, a proportion of MCL patients still experience early failure. To identify biomarkers anticipating failure of intensive chemotherapy in MCL, we performed target resequencing and DNA profiling of purified tumor samples collected from patients enrolled in the prospective FIL-MCL0208 phase 3 trial (high-dose chemoimmunotherapy followed by autologous transplantation and randomized lenalidomide maintenance). Mutations of KMT2D and disruption of TP53 by deletion or mutation associated with an increased risk of progression and death, both in univariate and multivariate analysis. By adding KMT2D mutations and TP53 disruption to the MIPI-c backbone, we derived a new prognostic index, the “MIPI-genetic” (“MIPI- g”). The “MIPI-g” improved the model discrimination ability compared to the MIPI-c alone, defining three risk groups: i) low-risk patients (4-year progression free survival and overall survival of 72.0% and 94.5%); ii) inter-mediate-risk patients (4-year progression free survival and overall survival of 42.2% and 65.8%) and iii) high-risk patients (4-year progression free survival and overall survival of 11.5% and 44.9%). Our results: i) confirm that TP53 disruption identifies a high-risk population characterized by poor sensitivity to conventional or intensified chemotherapy; ii) provide the pivotal evidence that patients harboring KMT2D mutations share the same poor outcome as patients harboring TP53 disruption; and iii) allow to develop a tool for the identification of high-risk MCL patients for whom novel therapeutic strategies need to be investigated. (Trial registered at clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT02354313).
- Published
- 2020
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