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31


Gene expression signature predicts relapse in adult patients with cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia

Walker, Christopher J; Mrózek, Krzysztof; Ozer, Hatice Gulcin; Nicolet, Deedra; Kohlschmidt, Jessica; Papaioannou, Dimitrios; Genutis, Luke K; Bill, Marius; Powell, Bayard L; Uy, Geoffrey L; Kolitz, Jonathan E; Carroll, Andrew J; Stone, Richard M; Garzon, Ramiro; Byrd, John C; Eisfeld, Ann-Kathrin; de la Chapelle, Albert; Bloomfield, Clara D
Although ∼80% of adult patients with cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia (CN-AML) achieve a complete remission (CR), more than half of them relapse. Better identification of patients who are likely to relapse can help to inform clinical decisions. We performed RNA sequencing on pretreatment samples from 268 adults with de novo CN-AML who were younger than 60 years of age and achieved a CR after induction treatment with standard "7+3" chemotherapy. After filtering for genes whose expressions were associated with gene mutations known to impact outcome (ie, CEBPA, NPM1, and FLT3-internal tandem duplication [FLT3-ITD]), we identified a 10-gene signature that was strongly predictive of patient relapse (area under the receiver operating characteristics curve [AUC], 0.81). The signature consisted of 7 coding genes (GAS6, PSD3, PLCB4, DEXI, JMY, NRP1, C10orf55) and 3 long noncoding RNAs. In multivariable analysis, the 10-gene signature was strongly associated with relapse (P < .001), after adjustment for the FLT3-ITD, CEBPA, and NPM1 mutational status. Validation of the expression signature in an independent patient set from The Cancer Genome Atlas showed the signature's strong predictive value, with AUC = 0.78. Implementation of the 10-gene signature into clinical prognostic stratification could be useful for identifying patients who are likely to relapse.
PMCID:7948288
PMID: 33683341
ISSN: 2473-9537
CID: 4809082

Additional gene mutations may refine the 2017 European LeukemiaNet classification in adult patients with de novo acute myeloid leukemia aged <60 years

Eisfeld, Ann-Kathrin; Kohlschmidt, Jessica; Mims, Alice; Nicolet, Deedra; Walker, Christopher J; Blachly, James S; Carroll, Andrew J; Papaioannou, Dimitrios; Kolitz, Jonathan E; Powell, Bayard E; Stone, Richard M; de la Chapelle, Albert; Byrd, John C; Mrózek, Krzysztof; Bloomfield, Clara D
The European LeukemiaNet (ELN) recommendations for diagnosis and management of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) have become an important tool to assess patients' prognosis and guide treatment. We tested the prognostic impact of the 2017 ELN classification in a large cohort of 863 AML patients aged <60 years similarly treated on Cancer and Leukemia Group B/Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology studies. Based on multivariable models within each ELN genetic-risk group, we identified additional gene mutations that may refine the 2017 ELN risk classification. BCOR- or SETBP1-mutated favorable-risk patients with non-core-binding factor AML and IDH-mutated adverse-risk patients had intermediate-risk outcomes. Outcomes of NPM1/WT1 co-mutated patients and those of ZRSR2-mutated patients resembled outcome of adverse-risk patients. Moreover, FLT3-ITDhigh allelic ratio conferred adverse rather than intermediate-risk irrespective of the NPM1 mutation status, and DNMT3A mutations associated with very poor survival. Application of these refinements reclassified 9% of current favorable-risk patients and 53% of current intermediate-risk patients to the adverse-risk group, with similar poor survival as current adverse-risk patients. Furthermore, 4% of current favorable-risk patients and 9% of adverse-risk patients were reclassified to the intermediate-risk group.
PMID: 32461631
ISSN: 1476-5551
CID: 4451812

Mutational landscape and clinical outcome of patients with de novo acute myeloid leukemia and rearrangements involving 11q23/KMT2A

Bill, Marius; Mrózek, Krzysztof; Kohlschmidt, Jessica; Eisfeld, Ann-Kathrin; Walker, Christopher J; Nicolet, Deedra; Papaioannou, Dimitrios; Blachly, James S; Orwick, Shelley; Carroll, Andrew J; Kolitz, Jonathan E; Powell, Bayard L; Stone, Richard M; de la Chapelle, Albert; Byrd, John C; Bloomfield, Clara D
Balanced rearrangements involving the KMT2A gene, located at 11q23, are among the most frequent chromosome aberrations in acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Because of numerous fusion partners, the mutational landscape and prognostic impact of specific 11q23/KMT2A rearrangements are not fully understood. We analyzed clinical features of 172 adults with AML and recurrent 11q23/KMT2A rearrangements, 141 of whom had outcome data available. We compared outcomes of these patients with outcomes of 1,097 patients without an 11q23/KMT2A rearrangement categorized according to the 2017 European LeukemiaNet (ELN) classification. Using targeted next-generation sequencing, we investigated the mutational status of 81 leukemia/cancer-associated genes in 96 patients with 11q23/KMT2A rearrangements with material for molecular studies available. Patients with 11q23/KMT2A rearrangements had a low number of additional gene mutations (median, 1; range 0 to 6), which involved the RAS pathway (KRAS, NRAS, and PTPN11) in 32% of patients. KRAS mutations occurred more often in patients with t(6;11)(q27;q23)/KMT2A-AFDN compared with patients with the other 11q23/KMT2A subsets. Specific gene mutations were too infrequent in patients with specific 11q23/KMT2A rearrangements to assess their associations with outcomes. We demonstrate that younger (age <60 y) patients with t(9;11)(p22;q23)/KMT2A-MLLT3 had better outcomes than patients with other 11q23/KMT2A rearrangements and those without 11q23/KMT2A rearrangements classified in the 2017 ELN intermediate-risk group. Conversely, outcomes of older patients (age ≥60 y) with t(9;11)(p22;q23) were poor and comparable to those of the ELN adverse-risk group patients. Our study shows that patients with an 11q23/KMT2A rearrangement have distinct mutational patterns and outcomes depending on the fusion partner.
PMID: 33020282
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 4626732

Author Correction: The long non-coding RNA HOXB-AS3 regulates ribosomal RNA transcription in NPM1-mutated acute myeloid leukemia

Papaioannou, Dimitrios; Petri, Andreas; Dovey, Oliver M; Terreri, Sara; Wang, Eric; Collins, Frances A; Woodward, Lauren A; Walker, Allison E; Nicolet, Deedra; Pepe, Felice; Kumchala, Prasanthi; Bill, Marius; Walker, Christopher J; Karunasiri, Malith; Mrózek, Krzysztof; Gardner, Miranda L; Camilotto, Virginia; Zitzer, Nina; Cooper, Jonathan L; Cai, Xiongwei; Rong-Mullins, Xiaoqing; Kohlschmidt, Jessica; Archer, Kellie J; Freitas, Michael A; Zheng, Yi; Lee, Robert J; Aifantis, Iannis; Vassiliou, George; Singh, Guramrit; Kauppinen, Sakari; Bloomfield, Clara D; Dorrance, Adrienne M; Garzon, Ramiro
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
PMID: 32728019
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 4581172

Mutations associated with a 17-gene leukemia stem cell score and its prognostic relevance in the context of the European LeukemiaNet classification for acute myeloid leukemia

Bill, Marius; Nicolet, Deedra; Kohlschmidt, Jessica; Walker, Christopher J; Mrózek, Krzysztof; Eisfeld, Ann-Kathrin; Papaioannou, Dimitrios; Rong-Mullins, Xiaoqing; Brannan, Zachary; Kolitz, Jonathan E; Powell, Bayard L; Archer, Kellie J; Dorrance, Adrienne M; Carroll, Andrew J; Stone, Richard M; Byrd, John C; Garzon, Ramiro; Bloomfield, Clara D
Leukemia stem cells are more resistant to standard chemotherapy and their persistence during remission can cause relapse which is still one of the major clinical challenges in the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia. A better understanding of the mutational patterns and the prognostic impact of molecular markers associated with stemness could lead to better clinical management and improve patients' outcomes. We generated a previously described 17-gene expression score comprising genes differently expressed between leukemia stem cells and leukemic bulk blasts, for 934 adult patients with de novo acute myeloid leukemia, and studied associations of the 17-gene leukemia stem cell score with clinical data and mutation status of 81 genes recurrently mutated in cancer and leukemia. We found that patients with a high 17-gene score were older and had more mutations. The 17-gene score was found to have a prognostic impact in both younger (aged <60 years) and older (aged ≥60 years) patients with acute myeloid leukemia. We also analyzed the 17-gene leukemia stem cell score in the context of the 2017 European LeukemiaNet genetic-risk classification and found that for younger patients the score further refined the classification and identified for example patient subsets with worse outcomes that are currently classified as European LeukemiaNet Favorable-risk.
PMID: 31413100
ISSN: 1592-8721
CID: 4042502

EGFL7 Antagonizes NOTCH Signaling and Represents a Novel Therapeutic Target in Acute Myeloid Leukemia

Bill, Marius; Pathmanathan, Aparna; Karunasiri, Malith; Shen, Changxian; Burke, Matthew H; Ranganathan, Parvathi; Papaioannou, Dimitrios; Zitzer, Nina C; Snyder, Katiri; LaRocco, Allison; Walker, Allison E; Brannan, Zachary J; Nalin, Ansel P; Freud, Aharon G; Dikov, Mikhail M; Zhang, Xiaoli; Bloomfield, Clara D; Garzon, Ramiro; Dorrance, Adrienne M
PURPOSE:EGF-like domain 7 (EGFL7) is a secreted protein and recently has been shown to play an important role in acute myeloid leukemia (AML); however, the underlying mechanism by which EGFL7 promotes leukemogenesis is largely unknown. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN:. RESULTS:treatment with anti-EGFL7 alone results in increased survival. CONCLUSIONS:using anti-EGFL7 results in prolonged survival of leukemic mice, supporting the use of EGFL7 as a novel therapeutic target in AML.
PMID: 31672772
ISSN: 1557-3265
CID: 5810912

Clinical and molecular characterization of patients with acute myeloid leukemia and sole trisomies of chromosomes 4, 8, 11, 13 or 21

Bhatnagar, Bhavana; Eisfeld, Ann-Kathrin; Kohlschmidt, Jessica; Mrózek, Krzysztof; Nicolet, Deedra; Papaioannou, Dimitrios; Walker, Christopher J; Orwick, Shelley; Blachly, James S; Kolitz, Jonathan E; Powell, Bayard L; Carroll, Andrew J; Stone, Richard M; Byrd, John C; Bloomfield, Clara D
Sole trisomies of chromosomes 4, 8, 11, 13 and 21 account for 89-95% of all sole trisomies in adult AML patients. We analyzed clinical and molecular characteristics of 138 de novo AML patients with sole +4, +8, +11, +13 or +21, and compared them with AML patients with those trisomies occurring in addition to other chromosome abnormalities (non-sole trisomy) and with cytogenetically normal AML (CN-AML) patients. Mutations in methylation-related genes were most commonly observed within each sole trisomy group (+4, 55%; +8, 58%; +11, 71%; +13, 71%; +21, 75% of patients). Patients with sole trisomies, excluding +4, also had frequent mutations in spliceosome genes (+8, 43%; +11, 65%; +13, 65%; +21, 45% of patients). In contrast, +4 patients frequently had mutations in transcription factor genes (44%) and NPM1 (36%). While 48% of patients with sole trisomies harbored mutations in a spliceosome gene, spliceosome mutations were observed in only 24% of non-sole trisomy (n = 131, P < 0.001) and 19% of CN-AML patients (n = 716, P < 0.001). Our data suggest that mutations affecting methylation-related genes are a molecular hallmark of sole trisomies. Mutations in spliceosome genes were also commonly observed in many sole trisomy patients and represent a novel finding in this cytogenetic subgroup.
PMID: 31462731
ISSN: 1476-5551
CID: 4066332

Clinical and functional significance of circular RNAs in cytogenetically normal AML

Papaioannou, Dimitrios; Volinia, Stefano; Nicolet, Deedra; Åšwierniak, MichaÅ‚; Petri, Andreas; Mrózek, Krzysztof; Bill, Marius; Pepe, Felice; Walker, Christopher J; Walker, Allison E; Carroll, Andrew J; Kohlschmidt, Jessica; Eisfeld, Ann-Kathrin; Powell, Bayard L; Uy, Geoffrey L; Kolitz, Jonathan E; Wang, Eunice S; Kauppinen, Sakari; Dorrance, Adrienne; Stone, Richard M; Byrd, John C; Bloomfield, Clara D; Garzon, Ramiro
Circular RNAs (circRNAs) are noncoding RNA molecules that display a perturbed arrangement of exons, called backsplicing. To examine the prognostic and biologic significance of circRNA expression in cytogenetically normal acute myeloid leukemia (CN-AML), we conducted whole-transcriptome profiling in 365 younger adults (age 18-60 years) with CN-AML. We applied a novel pipeline, called Massive Scan for circRNA, to identify and quantify circRNA expression. We validated the high sensitivity and specificity of our pipeline by performing RNase R treatment and RNA sequencing in samples of AML patients and cell lines. Unsupervised clustering analyses identified 3 distinct circRNA expression-based clusters with different frequencies of clinical and molecular features. After dividing our cohort into training and validation data sets, we identified 4 circRNAs (circCFLAR, circKLHL8, circSMC1A, and circFCHO2) that were prognostic in both data sets; high expression of each prognostic circRNA was associated with longer disease-free, overall, and event-free survival. In multivariable analyses, high circKLHL8 and high circFCHO2 expression were independently associated with better clinical outcome of CN-AML patients, after adjusting for other covariates. To examine the biologic relevance of circRNA expression, we performed knockdown screening experiments in a subset of prognostic and gene mutation-related candidate circRNAs. We identified circFBXW7, but not its linear messenger RNA, as a regulator of the proliferative capacity of AML blasts. In summary, our findings underscore the molecular associations, prognostic significance, and functional relevance of circRNA expression in CN-AML.
PMID: 31945158
ISSN: 2473-9537
CID: 4263832

Publisher Correction: The long non-coding RNA HOXB-AS3 regulates ribosomal RNA transcription in NPM1-mutated acute myeloid leukemia

Papaioannou, Dimitrios; Petri, Andreas; Dovey, Oliver M; Terreri, Sara; Wang, Eric; Collins, Frances A; Woodward, Lauren A; Walker, Allison E; Nicolet, Deedra; Pepe, Felice; Kumchala, Prasanthi; Bill, Marius; Walker, Christopher J; Karunasiri, Malith; Mrózek, Krzysztof; Gardner, Miranda L; Camilotto, Virginia; Zitzer, Nina; Cooper, Jonathan L; Cai, Xiongwei; Rong-Mullins, Xiaoqing; Kohlschmidt, Jessica; Archer, Kellie J; Freitas, Michael A; Zheng, Yi; Lee, Robert J; Aifantis, Iannis; Vassiliou, George; Singh, Guramrit; Kauppinen, Sakari; Bloomfield, Clara D; Dorrance, Adrienne M; Garzon, Ramiro
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
PMID: 31911614
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 4257282

The long non-coding RNA HOXB-AS3 regulates ribosomal RNA transcription in NPM1-mutated acute myeloid leukemia

Papaioannou, Dimitrios; Petri, Andreas; Dovey, Oliver M; Terreri, Sara; Wang, Eric; Collins, Frances A; Woodward, Lauren A; Walker, Allison E; Nicolet, Deedra; Pepe, Felice; Kumchala, Prasanthi; Bill, Marius; Walker, Christopher J; Karunasiri, Malith; Mrózek, Krzysztof; Gardner, Miranda L; Camilotto, Virginia; Zitzer, Nina; Cooper, Jonathan L; Cai, Xiongwei; Rong-Mullins, Xiaoqing; Kohlschmidt, Jessica; Archer, Kellie J; Freitas, Michael A; Zheng, Yi; Lee, Robert J; Aifantis, Iannis; Vassiliou, George; Singh, Guramrit; Kauppinen, Sakari; Bloomfield, Clara D; Dorrance, Adrienne M; Garzon, Ramiro
Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) are important regulatory molecules that are implicated in cellular physiology and pathology. In this work, we dissect the functional role of the HOXB-AS3 lncRNA in patients with NPM1-mutated (NPM1mut) acute myeloid leukemia (AML). We show that HOXB-AS3 regulates the proliferative capacity of NPM1mut AML blasts in vitro and in vivo. HOXB-AS3 is shown to interact with the ErbB3-binding protein 1 (EBP1) and guide EBP1 to the ribosomal DNA locus. Via this mechanism, HOXB-AS3 regulates ribosomal RNA transcription and de novo protein synthesis. We propose that in the context of NPM1 mutations, HOXB-AS3 overexpression acts as a compensatory mechanism, which allows adequate protein production in leukemic blasts.
PMCID:6877618
PMID: 31767858
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 4215722