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Multiple myeloma immunoglobulin lambda translocations portend poor prognosis

Authors :
David L. Jaye
Craig C. Hofmeister
Paola Neri
Nizar J. Bahlis
Daniel Auclair
Paula M. Vertino
Lawrence H. Boise
Ajay K. Nooka
Madhav V. Dhodapkar
Benjamin G. Barwick
Jonathan L. Kaufman
Vikas Gupta
Sagar Lonial
Jonathan J Keats
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2019), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2019.

Abstract

Multiple myeloma is a malignancy of antibody-secreting plasma cells. Most patients benefit from current therapies, however, 20% of patients relapse or die within two years and are deemed high risk. Here we analyze structural variants from 795 newly-diagnosed patients as part of the CoMMpass study. We report translocations involving the immunoglobulin lambda (IgL) locus are present in 10% of patients, and indicative of poor prognosis. This is particularly true for IgL-MYC translocations, which coincide with focal amplifications of enhancers at both loci. Importantly, 78% of IgL-MYC translocations co-occur with hyperdiploid disease, a marker of standard risk, suggesting that IgL-MYC-translocated myeloma is being misclassified. Patients with IgL-translocations fail to benefit from IMiDs, which target IKZF1, a transcription factor that binds the IgL enhancer at some of the highest levels in the myeloma epigenome. These data implicate IgL translocation as a driver of poor prognosis which may be due to IMiD resistance.<br />Multiple myeloma is frequently characterised by translocation of genes next to the immunoglobulin heavy chain locus. In this study, the authors sequence a large cohort of high risk myeloma samples and find translocations of cMyc to the immunoglobulin heavy chain locus and this is associated with poor prognosis.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d33f7c429eb60c2ab4e808817eb93612