Clinical implications of myeloid malignancy ‑related somatic mutations in aplastic anemia

AbstractAplastic anemia (AA) is a potentially fatal bone marrow failure syndrome characterized by a paucity of hematopoietic stem cells and progenitor cells with varying degrees of cytopenia and fatty infiltration of the bone marrow space. Recent advances in genomics have uncovered a link between somatic mutations and myeloid cancer in AA patients. At present, the impact of these mutations on AA patients remains uncertain. We retrospectively investigated 279 AA patients and 174 patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and performed targeted sequencing of 22 genes on their bone marrow cells using next-generation sequencing (NGS). Associations of somatic mutations with prognostic relevance and response to treatment were analyzed. Of 279 AA patients, 25 (9.0%) patients had somatic mutations, and 20 (7.2%) patients had one mutation. The most frequently mutated genes were ASXL1(3.2% of the patients), DNMT3A (1.8%) and TET2 (1.8%). In the MDS group, somatic mutations were detected in 120 of 174 (69.0%) patients, and 81 patients (46.6%) had more than one mutation. The most frequently mutated genes were U2AF1 (24.7% of the patients), ASXL1 (18.4%) and TP53 (13.2%). Compared with MDS patients, AA patients had a significantly lower frequency of somatic mutations and mostly one mutation. Similarly, the median variant allele frequency was lower in AA patients than in MDS patients (6.9% vs. 28.4%). The overall response of 3 and 6 months in the somatic mutation (SM) group was 37.5% an...
Source: Clinical and Experimental Medicine - Category: Research Source Type: research