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Distinct clinical and genetic features of hepatitis B virus–associated follicular lymphoma in Chinese patients

Authors :
Ren, Weicheng
Wang, Xianhuo
Yang, Mingyu
Wan, Hui
Li, Xiaobo
Ye, Xiaofei
Meng, Bing
Li, Wei
Yu, Jingwei
Lei, Mengyue
Xie, Fanfan
Jiang, Wenqi
Kimby, Eva
Huang, Huiqiang
Liu, Dongbing
Li, Zhi-Ming
Wu, Kui
Zhang, Huilai
Pan-Hammarström, Qiang
Source :
Blood Advances; May 2022, Vol. 6 Issue: 9 p2731-2744, 14p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection has been associated with an increased risk for B-cell lymphomas. We previously showed that 20% of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) patients from China, an endemic area of HBV infection, have chronic HBV infection (surface antigen–positive, HBsAg+) and are characterized by distinct clinical and genetic features. Here, we showed that 24% of follicular lymphoma (FL) Chinese patients are HBsAg+. Compared with the HBsAg− FL patients, HBsAg+ patients are younger, have a higher histological grade at diagnosis, and have a higher incidence of disease progression within 24 months. Moreover, by sequencing the genomes of 109 FL tumors, we observed enhanced mutagenesis and distinct genetic profile in HBsAg+ FLs, with a unique set of preferentially mutated genes (TNFAIP3, FAS, HIST1H1C, KLF2, TP53, PIM1, TMSB4X, DUSP2, TAGAP, LYN, and SETD2) but lack of the hallmark of HBsAg− FLs (ie, IGH/BCL2 translocations and CREBBP mutations). Transcriptomic analyses further showed that HBsAg+ FLs displayed gene-expression signatures resembling the activated B-cell–like subtype of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, involving IRF4-targeted genes and NF-κB/MYD88 signaling pathways. Finally, we identified an increased infiltration of CD8+ memory T cells, CD4+ Th1 cells, and M1 macrophages and higher T-cell exhaustion gene signature in HBsAg+ FL samples. Taken together, we present new genetic/epigenetic evidence that links chronic HBV infection to B-cell lymphomagenesis, and HBV-associated FL is likely to have a distinct cell-of-origin and represent as a separate subtype of FL. Targetable genetic/epigenetic alterations identified in tumors and their associated tumor microenvironment may provide potential novel therapeutic approaches for this subgroup of patients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
24739529 and 24739537
Volume :
6
Issue :
9
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Blood Advances
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs59546048
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2021006410