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Evolutionary clonal trajectories in nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma with high risk of transformation

Authors :
Paschold, Lisa
Willscher, Edith
Bein, Julia
Vornanen, Martine
Eichenauer, Dennis A.
Simnica, Donjete
Thiele, Benjamin
Wickenhauser, Claudia
Rosenwald, Andreas
Bernd, Heinz-Wolfram
Klapper, Wolfram
Feller, Alfred C.
Ott, German
Fend, Falko
Hartmann, Sylvia
Binder, Mascha
Paschold, Lisa
Willscher, Edith
Bein, Julia
Vornanen, Martine
Eichenauer, Dennis A.
Simnica, Donjete
Thiele, Benjamin
Wickenhauser, Claudia
Rosenwald, Andreas
Bernd, Heinz-Wolfram
Klapper, Wolfram
Feller, Alfred C.
Ott, German
Fend, Falko
Hartmann, Sylvia
Binder, Mascha
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The B-cell architecture of nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma (NLPHL) is complex since it is composed of malignant lymphocyte-predominant cells along with a rich B-cell bystander environment. To gain insight into molecular determinants of disease transformation, we studied B-cell evolutionary trajectories in lymphoma tissue from diagnosis to relapse or transformation to non-Hodgkin lymphoma by next-generation sequencing of immunoglobulin heavy chains. Patients with NLPHL that later transformed were older and showed IgD negativity, absence of the characteristic IGHV3/IGHD3/IGHJ6 lymphocyte-predominant rearrangement and high repertoire clonality. We constructed phylogenetic trees within the compartment of the malignant clone to investigate clonal evolution. In all relapsing cases, the lymphocyte-predominant rearrangement was identical at diagnosis and relapse. NLPHL cases with transformation showed more complex trajectories with strong intraclonal diversification. The dominant founder clone in transformations showed clonal evolution if derived from the same cell of origin, or arose from a different cell of origin. Together, our data point to a significant role of antigenic drive in the transformation of NLHPL and identify high B-cell repertoire clonality with dominant intraclonal lymphocyte-predominant cell diversification as a hallmark of transformation. Sequencing of initial paraffin-embedded tissue may therefore be applied diagnostically to identify NLPHL cases with high risk of transformation.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1312207238
Document Type :
Electronic Resource