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Prospective assessment of NGS-detectable mutations in CML patients with nonoptimal response: the NEXT-in-CML study.

Authors :
Soverini S
Bavaro L
De Benedittis C
Martelli M
Iurlo A
Orofino N
Sica S
Sorà F
Lunghi F
Ciceri F
Galimberti S
Baratè C
Bonifacio M
Scaffidi L
Castagnetti F
Gugliotta G
Albano F
Russo Rossi AV
Stagno F
di Raimondo F
D'Adda M
di Bona E
Abruzzese E
Binotto G
Sancetta R
Salvucci M
Capodanno I
Girasoli M
Coluzzi S
Attolico I
Musolino C
Calistri E
Annunziata M
Bocchia M
Stella S
Serra A
Errichiello S
Saglio G
Pane F
Vigneri P
Mignone F
Laginestra MA
Pileri SA
Percesepe A
Tenti E
Rosti G
Baccarani M
Cavo M
Martinelli G
Source :
Blood [Blood] 2020 Feb 20; Vol. 135 (8), pp. 534-541.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

In chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients, tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) may select for drug-resistant BCR-ABL1 kinase domain (KD) mutants. Although Sanger sequencing (SS) is considered the gold standard for BCR-ABL1 KD mutation screening, next-generation sequencing (NGS) has recently been assessed in retrospective studies. We conducted a prospective, multicenter study (NEXT-in-CML) to assess the frequency and clinical relevance of low-level mutations and the feasibility, cost, and turnaround times of NGS-based BCR-ABL1 mutation screening in a routine setting. A series of 236 consecutive CML patients with failure (n = 124) or warning (n = 112) response to TKI therapy were analyzed in parallel by SS and NGS in 1 of 4 reference laboratories. Fifty-one patients (22 failure, 29 warning) who were negative for mutations by SS had low-level mutations detectable by NGS. Moreover, 29 (27 failure, 2 warning) of 60 patients who were positive for mutations by SS showed additional low-level mutations. Thus, mutations undetectable by SS were identified in 80 out of 236 patients (34%), of whom 42 (18% of the total) had low-level mutations somehow relevant for clinical decision making. Prospective monitoring of mutation kinetics demonstrated that TKI-resistant low-level mutations are invariably selected if the patients are not switched to another TKI or if they are switched to a inappropriate TKI or TKI dose. The NEXT-in-CML study provides for the first time robust demonstration of the clinical relevance of low-level mutations, supporting the incorporation of NGS-based BCR-ABL1 KD mutation screening results in the clinical decision algorithms.<br /> (© 2020 by The American Society of Hematology.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1528-0020
Volume :
135
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Blood
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31877211
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.2019002969