Back to Search Start Over

Plasmacytoid dendritic cells proliferation associated with acute myeloid leukemia: phenotype profile and mutation landscape

Authors :
Loria Zalmaï
Pierre-Julien Viailly
Sabeha Biichle
Meyling Cheok
Lou Soret
Fanny Angelot-Delettre
Tony Petrella
Marie-Agnès Collonge-Rame
Estelle Seilles
Sandrine Geffroy
Eric Deconinck
Etienne Daguindau
Sabrina Bouyer
Elodie Dindinaud
Victor Baunin
Magali Le Garff-Tavernier
Damien Roos-Weil
Orianne Wagner-Ballon
Véronique Salaun
Jean Feuillard
Sophie Brun
Bernard Drenou
Caroline Mayeur-Rousse
Patricia Okamba
Véronique Dorvaux
Michel Tichionni
Johann Rose
Marie Thérèse Rubio
Marie Christine Jacob
Victoria Raggueneau
Claude Preudhomme
Philippe Saas
Christophe Ferrand
Olivier Adotevi
Christophe Roumier
Fabrice Jardin
Francine Garnache-Ottou
Florian Renosi
Source :
Haematologica, Vol 106, Iss 12 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Ferrata Storti Foundation, 2020.

Abstract

Neoplasms involving plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDC) include blastic pDC neoplasms (BPDCN) and other pDC proliferations, where pDC are associated with myeloid malignancies: most frequently chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) but also acute myeloid leukemia (AML), hereafter named pDC-AML. We aimed to determine the reactive or neoplastic origin of pDC in pDC-AML, and their link with the CD34+ blasts, monocytes or conventional DC (cDC) associated in the same sample, by phenotypic and molecular analyses (targeted next-generation sequencing, 70 genes). We compared 15 pDCAML at diagnosis with 21 BPDCN and 11 normal pDC from healthy donors. CD45low CD34+ blasts were found in all cases (10-80% of medullar cells), associated with pDC (4-36%), monocytes in 14 cases (1-10%) and cDC (two cases, 4.8-19%). pDC in pDC-AML harbor a clearly different phenotype from BPDCN: CD4+ CD56– in 100% of cases, most frequently CD303+, CD304+ and CD34+; lower expression of cTCL1 and CD123 with isolated lymphoid markers (CD22/CD7/CD5) in some cases, suggesting a prepDC stage. In all cases, pDC, monocytes and cDC are neoplastic since they harbor the same mutations as CD34+ blasts. RUNX1 is the most commonly mutated gene: detected in all AML with minimal differentiation (M0-AML) but not in the other cases. Despite the low number of cases, the systematic association between M0-AML, RUNX1 mutations and an excess of pDC is puzzling. Further evaluation in a larger cohort is required to confirm RUNX1 mutations in pDC-AML with minimal differentiation and to investigate whether it represents a proliferation of blasts with macrophage and DC progenitor potential.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03906078 and 15928721
Volume :
106
Issue :
12
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Haematologica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.74099b909c3e4d95b870c46bcce460cb
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2020.253740