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Genetically determining individualized clinical reference ranges for the biomarker tryptase can limit unnecessary procedures and unmask myeloid neoplasms

Authors :
Jack Chovanec
Ilker Tunc
Jason Hughes
Joseph Halstead
Allyson Mateja
Yihui Liu
Michael P. O’Connell
Jiwon Kim
Young Hwan Park
Qinlu Wang
Quang Le
Mehdi Pirooznia
Neil N. Trivedi
Yun Bai
Yuzhi Yin
Amy P. Hsu
Josh McElwee
Sheryce Lassiter
Celeste Nelson
Judy Bandoh
Thomas DiMaggio
Julij Šelb
Matija Rijavec
Melody C. Carter
Hirsh D. Komarow
Vito Sabato
Joshua Steinberg
Kurt M. Hafer
Elizabeth Feuille
Christopher S. Hourigan
Justin Lack
Paneez Khoury
Irina Maric
Roberta Zanotti
Patrizia Bonadonna
Lawrence B. Schwartz
Joshua D. Milner
Sarah C. Glover
Didier G. Ebo
Peter Korošec
George H. Caughey
Erica H. Brittain.
Ben Busby
Dean D. Metcalfe
Jonathan J. Lyons
Source :
Blood advances
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Serum tryptase is a biomarker used to aid in the identification of certain myeloid neoplasms, most notably systemic mastocytosis, where baseline (BST) levels >20 ng/mL are a minor criterion for diagnosis. Whereas clonal myeloid neoplasms are rare, the common cause for elevated BST is the genetic trait hereditary alpha-tryptasemia (HαT) caused by increased germline TPSAB1 copy number. To date, the precise structural variation and mechanism(s) underlying elevated BST in HαT and the general clinical utility of tryptase genotyping, remain undefined. Through cloning, long-read sequencing, and assembling of the human tryptase locus from an individual with HαT, and validating our findings in vitro and in silico, we demonstrate that BST elevations arise from over-expression of replicated TPSAB1 loci encoding wild-type α-tryptase due to co-inheritance of a linked over-active promoter element. Modeling BST levels based upon TPSAB1 replication number we generate new individualized clinical reference values for the upper limit of ‘normal’. Using this personalized laboratory medicine approach, we demonstrate the clinical utility of tryptase genotyping, finding that in the absence of HαT, BST levels >11.4 ng/mL frequently identify indolent clonal mast cell disease. Moreover, substantial BST elevations (e.g., >100 ng/mL) which would ordinarily prompt bone marrow biopsy, can result from TPSAB1 replications alone and thus be within ‘normal’ limits for certain individuals with HαT.

Subjects

Subjects :
Human medicine

Details

ISSN :
24739537 and 24739529
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d62cfc564a6934c2a8ab01741864ebac