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Real-World Validation of Molecular International Prognostic Scoring System for Myelodysplastic Syndromes

Authors :
Elisabetta Sauta
Marie Robin
Matteo Bersanelli
Erica Travaglino
Manja Meggendorfer
Lin-Pierre Zhao
Juan Carlos Caballero Berrocal
Claudia Sala
Giulia Maggioni
Massimo Bernardi
Carmen Di Grazia
Luca Vago
Giulia Rivoli
Lorenza Borin
Saverio D'Amico
Cristina Astrid Tentori
Marta Ubezio
Alessia Campagna
Antonio Russo
Daniele Mannina
Luca Lanino
Patrizia Chiusolo
Luisa Giaccone
Maria Teresa Voso
Marta Riva
Esther Natalie Oliva
Matteo Zampini
Elena Riva
Olivier Nibourel
Marilena Bicchieri
Niccolo’ Bolli
Alessandro Rambaldi
Francesco Passamonti
Victor Savevski
Armando Santoro
Ulrich Germing
Shahram Kordasti
Valeria Santini
Maria Diez-Campelo
Guillermo Sanz
Francesc Sole
Wolfgang Kern
Uwe Platzbecker
Lionel Ades
Pierre Fenaux
Torsten Haferlach
Gastone Castellani
Matteo Giovanni Della Porta
Sauta, E
Robin, M
Bersanelli, M
Travaglino, E
Meggendorfer, M
Zhao, L
Caballero Berrocal, J
Sala, C
Maggioni, G
Bernardi, M
Di Grazia, C
Vago, L
Rivoli, G
Borin, L
D'Amico, S
Tentori, C
Ubezio, M
Campagna, A
Russo, A
Mannina, D
Lanino, L
Chiusolo, P
Giaccone, L
Voso, M
Riva, M
Oliva, E
Zampini, M
Riva, E
Nibourel, O
Bicchieri, M
Bolli, N
Rambaldi, A
Passamonti, F
Savevski, V
Santoro, A
Germing, U
Kordasti, S
Santini, V
Diez-Campelo, M
Sanz, G
Sole, F
Kern, W
Platzbecker, U
Ades, L
Fenaux, P
Haferlach, T
Castellani, G
Della Porta, M
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

PURPOSE Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are heterogeneous myeloid neoplasms in which a risk-adapted treatment strategy is needed. Recently, a new clinical-molecular prognostic model, the Molecular International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS-M) was proposed to improve the prediction of clinical outcome of the currently available tool (Revised International Prognostic Scoring System [IPSS-R]). We aimed to provide an extensive validation of IPSS-M. METHODS A total of 2,876 patients with primary MDS from the GenoMed4All consortium were retrospectively analyzed. RESULTS IPSS-M improved prognostic discrimination across all clinical end points with respect to IPSS-R (concordance was 0.81 v 0.74 for overall survival and 0.89 v 0.76 for leukemia-free survival, respectively). This was true even in those patients without detectable gene mutations. Compared with the IPSS-R based stratification, the IPSS-M risk group changed in 46% of patients (23.6% and 22.4% of subjects were upstaged and downstaged, respectively). In patients treated with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), IPSS-M significantly improved the prediction of the risk of disease relapse and the probability of post-transplantation survival versus IPSS-R (concordance was 0.76 v 0.60 for overall survival and 0.89 v 0.70 for probability of relapse, respectively). In high-risk patients treated with hypomethylating agents (HMA), IPSS-M failed to stratify individual probability of response; response duration and probability of survival were inversely related to IPSS-M risk. Finally, we tested the accuracy in predicting IPSS-M when molecular information was missed and we defined a minimum set of 15 relevant genes associated with high performance of the score. CONCLUSION IPSS-M improves MDS prognostication and might result in a more effective selection of candidates to HSCT. Additional factors other than gene mutations can be involved in determining HMA sensitivity. The definition of a minimum set of relevant genes may facilitate the clinical implementation of the score.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....70ebc3c77262da4167276650f5fa06d7