Clonal haemopoiesis and therapy-related myeloid malignancies in elderly patients: a proof-of-concept, case-control study

被引:252
作者
Gillis, Nancy K. [1 ,2 ,6 ]
Ball, Markus [3 ]
Zhang, Qing [3 ]
Ma, Zhenjun [4 ]
Zhao, YuLong [3 ]
Yoder, Sean J. [5 ]
Balasis, Maria E. [3 ]
Mesa, Tania E. [5 ]
Sallman, David A. [3 ]
Lancet, Jeffrey E. [3 ]
Komrokji, Rami S. [3 ]
List, Alan F. [3 ]
McLeod, Howard L. [1 ,2 ]
Alsina, Melissa [3 ]
Baz, Rachid [3 ]
Shain, Kenneth H. [3 ]
Rollison, Dana E. [1 ,2 ]
Padron, Eric [3 ]
机构
[1] H Lee Moffitt Canc Ctr & Res Inst, DeBartolo Family Personalised Med Inst, Tampa, FL USA
[2] H Lee Moffitt Canc Ctr & Res Inst, Dept Canc Epidemiol, Tampa, FL USA
[3] H Lee Moffitt Canc Ctr & Res Inst, Dept Malignant Hematol, Tampa, FL 33612 USA
[4] H Lee Moffitt Canc Ctr & Res Inst, Dept Biostat & Bioinformat, Tampa, FL USA
[5] H Lee Moffitt Canc Ctr & Res Inst, Mol Genom Core, Tampa, FL USA
[6] Univ N Carolina, Eshelman Sch Pharm, Ctr Pharmacogen & Individualised Therapy, Chapel Hill, NC USA
关键词
MYELODYSPLASTIC SYNDROMES; ADJUVANT CHEMOTHERAPY; BREAST-CANCER; COLON-CANCER; MUTATIONS; LEUKEMIA; VARIANTS; SEQUENCE; OUTCOMES; FORMAT;
D O I
10.1016/S1470-2045(16)30627-1
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Background Clonal haemopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP) is an age-associated genetic event linked to increased risk of primary haematological malignancies and increased all-cause mortality, but the prevalence of CHIP in patients who develop therapy-related myeloid neoplasms is unknown. We did this study to investigate whether chemotherapy-treated patients with cancer who have CHIP are at increased risk of developing therapy-related myeloid neoplasms. Methods We did a nested, case-control, proof-of-concept study to compare the prevalence of CHIP between patients with cancer who later developed therapy-related myeloid neoplasms (cases) and patients who did not develop these neoplasms (controls). We identified cases from our internal biorepository of 123 357 patients who consented to participate in the Total Cancer Care biobanking protocol at Moffitt Cancer Center (Tampa, FL, USA) between Jan 1, 2006, and June 1, 2016. We included all individuals who were diagnosed with a primary malignancy, were treated with chemotherapy, subsequently developed a therapy-related myeloid neoplasm, and were 70 years or older at either diagnosis. For inclusion in this study, individuals must have had a peripheral blood or mononuclear cell sample collected before the diagnosis of therapy-related myeloid neoplasm. Controls were individuals who were diagnosed with a primary malignancy at age 70 years or older and were treated with chemotherapy but did not develop therapy-related myeloid neoplasms. Controls were matched to cases in at least a 4: 1 ratio on the basis of sex, primary tumour type, age at diagnosis, smoking status, chemotherapy drug class, and duration of follow-up. We used sequential targeted and whole-exome sequencing and described clonal evolution in cases for whom paired CHIP and therapy-related myeloid neoplasm samples were available. The primary endpoint of this study was the development of therapy-related myeloid neoplasm and the primary exposure was CHIP. Findings We identified 13 cases and 56 case-matched controls. The prevalence of CHIP in all patients (23 [33%] of 69 patients) was higher than has previously been reported in elderly individuals without cancer (about 10%). Cases had a significantly higher prevalence of CHIP than did matched controls (eight [62%] of 13 cases vs 15 [27%] of 56 controls, p=0.024; odds ratio 5.75, 95% CI 1.52-25.09, p=0.013). The most commonly mutated genes in cases with CHIP were TET2 (three [38%] of eight patients) and TP53 (three [38%] of eight patients), whereas controls most often had TET2 mutations (six [40%] of 15 patients). In most (four [67%] of six patients) cases for whom paired CHIP and therapy-related myeloid neoplasm samples were available, the mean allele frequency of CHIP mutations had expanded by the time of the therapy-related myeloid neoplasm diagnosis. However, a subset of paired samples (two [33%] of six patients) had CHIP mutations that decreased in allele frequency, giving way to expansion of a distinct mutant clone. Interpretation Patients with therapy-related myeloid neoplasms are more likely than are those who do not develop therapy-related myeloid neoplasms to have CHIP and, in many cases, before exposure to chemotherapy. The distribution of CHIP-related gene mutations differs between individuals with therapy-related myeloid neoplasm and those without, suggesting that mutation-specific differences might exist in therapy-related myeloid neoplasm risk.
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页码:112 / 121
页数:10
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