Clinical characterization of the mutational landscape of 24,639 real-world samples from patients with myeloid malignancies.

Grant Hogg,Eric A Severson, Li Cai, Heidi M Hoffmann, Kimberly A Holden,Kerry Fitzgerald, Angela Kenyon,Qiandong Zeng, Michael Mooney, Sabrina Gardner,Wenjie Chen, Narasimhan Nagan, Deborah Boles,Scott Parker, Tamara J Richman, Stanley Letovsky,Henry Dong,Steven M Anderson, Shakti Ramkissoon, Prasanth Reddy, Marcia Eisenberg,Anjen Chenn,Taylor J Jensen

Cancer genetics(2023)

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摘要
Myeloid neoplasms represent a broad spectrum of hematological disorders for which somatic mutation status in key driver genes is important for diagnosis, prognosis and treatment. Here we summarize the findings of a targeted, next generation sequencing laboratory developed test in 24,639 clinical myeloid samples. Data were analyzed comprehensively and as part of individual cohorts specific to acute myeloid leukemia (AML), myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), and myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN). Overall, 48,015 variants were detected, and variants were found in all 50 genes in the panel. The mean number of mutations per patient was 1.95. Mutation number increased with age (Spearman's rank correlation coefficient, ρ = 0.29, P < 0.0001) and was higher in patients with AML than MDS or MPN (Student's t-test, P < 0.0001). TET2 was the most common mutation detected (19.1% of samples; 4,695/24,639) including 7.7% (1,908/24,639) with multi-hit TET2 mutations. Mutation frequency was correlated between patients with cytopenias and MDS (Spearman's, ρ = 0.97, P < 2.2×10-16) with the MDS diagnostic gene SF3B1 being the only notable outlier. This large retrospective study shows the utility of NGS testing to inform clinical decisions during routine clinical care and highlights the mutational landscape of a broad population of myeloid patients.
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