Searched for: in-biosketch:true
person:morgag04
Genome-wide association study identifies variation at 6q25.1 associated with survival in multiple myeloma
Johnson, David C; Weinhold, Niels; Mitchell, Jonathan S; Chen, Bowang; Kaiser, Martin; Begum, Dil B; Hillengass, Jens; Bertsch, Uta; Gregory, Walter A; Cairns, David; Jackson, Graham H; Försti, Asta; Nickel, Jolanta; Hoffmann, Per; Nöethen, Markus M; Stephens, Owen W; Barlogie, Bart; Davis, Faith E; Hemminki, Kari; Goldschmidt, Hartmut; Houlston, Richard S; Morgan, Gareth J
Survival following a diagnosis of multiple myeloma (MM) varies between patients and some of these differences may be a consequence of inherited genetic variation. In this study, to identify genetic markers associated with MM overall survival (MM-OS), we conduct a meta-analysis of four patient series of European ancestry, totalling 3,256 patients with 1,200 MM-associated deaths. Each series is genotyped for ∼600,000 single nucleotide polymorphisms across the genome; genotypes for six million common variants are imputed using 1000 Genomes Project and UK10K as the reference. The association between genotype and OS is assessed by Cox proportional hazards model adjusting for age, sex, International staging system and treatment. We identify a locus at 6q25.1 marked by rs12374648 associated with MM-OS (hazard ratio=1.34, 95% confidence interval=1.22-1.48, P=4.69 × 10(-9)). Our findings have potential clinical implications since they demonstrate that inherited genotypes can provide prognostic information in addition to conventional tumor acquired prognostic factors.
PMCID:4729868
PMID: 26743840
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 3648712
Monoclonal antibody therapy in multiple myeloma: where do we stand and where are we going?
Thanendrarajan, Sharmilan; Davies, Faith E; Morgan, Gareth J; Schinke, Carolina; Mathur, Pankaj; Heuck, Christoph J; Zangari, Maurizio; Epstein, Joshua; Yaccoby, Shmuel; Weinhold, Niels; Barlogie, Bart; van Rhee, Frits
Multiple myeloma is a plasma cell malignancy that is characterized by refractory and relapsing course of disease. Despite the introduction of high-dose chemotherapy in combination with autologous stem cell transplantation and innovative agents such as proteasome inhibitors and immunomodulatory drugs, achieving cure in multiple myeloma is a challenging endeavor. In the last couple of years, enormous advances were made in implementing monoclonal antibody therapy in multiple myeloma. A large number of preclinical and clinical studies have been introduced successfully, demonstrating a safe and efficient administration of monoclonal antibodies in multiple myeloma. In particular, the application of monoclonal antibodies in combination with immunomodulatory drugs, proteasome inhibitors, corticosteroids or conventional chemotherapy seem to be promising and will expand the treatment arsenal for patients with multiple myeloma.
PMID: 26888183
ISSN: 1750-7448
CID: 3648722
MAF protein mediates innate resistance to proteasome inhibition therapy in multiple myeloma
Qiang, Ya-Wei; Ye, Shiqiao; Chen, Yu; Buros, Amy F; Edmonson, Ricky; van Rhee, Frits; Barlogie, Bart; Epstein, Joshua; Morgan, Gareth J; Davies, Faith E
Multiple myeloma (MM) patients with the t(14;16) translocation have a poor prognosis, and unlike other molecular subgroups, their outcome has not improved with the introduction of bortezomib (Bzb). The mechanism underlying innate resistance of MM to Bzb is unknown. In the present study, we have investigated how MAF overexpression impacts resistance to proteasome inhibitor (PI) therapy (Bzb and carfilzomib). High levels of MAF protein were found in t(14;16) cell lines; cell lines from the t(4;14) subgroup had intermediate levels, whereas cell lines from the other subgroups had low levels. High expression of MAF protein in t(14;16) was associated with significantly higher PI half-maximum inhibitory concentration values compared with other molecular subgroups. PI exposure abrogated glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β)-mediated degradation of MAF protein, resulting in increased MAF protein stability and PI resistance. Subsequent studies using loss-of-function and gain-of-function models showed that silencing MAF led to increased sensitivity to PIs, enhanced apoptosis, and activation of caspase-3, -7, -8, -9, poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase, and lamin A/C. In contrast, overexpression of MAF resulted in increased resistance to PIs and reduced apoptosis. These results define the role of MAF and GSK3 in the resistance of t(14;16) MM to PIs and identifies a novel mechanism by which MAF protein levels are regulated by PIs, which in turn confers resistance to PIs.
PMCID:5179331
PMID: 27793878
ISSN: 1528-0020
CID: 3649592
Genomewide profiling of copy-number alteration in monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance
Mikulasova, Aneta; Smetana, Jan; Wayhelova, Marketa; Janyskova, Helena; Sandecka, Viera; Kufova, Zuzana; Almasi, Martina; Jarkovsky, Jiri; Gregora, Evzen; Kessler, Petr; Wrobel, Marek; Walker, Brian A; Wardell, Christopher P; Morgan, Gareth J; Hajek, Roman; Kuglik, Petr
Monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) is a benign condition with an approximate 1% annual risk of symptomatic plasma cell disorder development, mostly to multiple myeloma (MM). We performed genomewide screening of copy-number alterations (CNAs) in 90 MGUS and 33 MM patients using high-density DNA microarrays. We identified CNAs in a smaller proportion of MGUS (65.6%) than in MM (100.0%, P = 1.31 × 10-5 ) and showed median number of CNAs is lower in MGUS (3, range 0-22) than in MM (13, range 4-38, P = 1.82 × 10-10 ). In the MGUS cohort, the most frequent losses were located at 1p (5.6%), 6q (6.7%), 13q (30.0%), 14q (14.4%), 16q (8.9%), 21q (5.6%), and gains at 1q (23.3%), 2p (6.7%), 6p (13.3%), and Xq (7.8%). Hyperdiploidy was detected in 38.9% of MGUS cases, and the most frequent whole chromosome gains were 3 (25.6%), 5 (23.3%), 9 (37.8%), 15 (23.3%), and 19 (32.2%). We also identified CNAs such as 1p, 6q, 8p, 12p, 13q, 16q losses, 1q gain and hypodiploidy, which are potentially associated with an adverse prognosis in MGUS. In summary, we showed that MGUS is similar to MM in that it is a genetically heterogeneous disorder, but overall cytogenetic instability is lower than in MM, which confirms that genetic abnormalities play important role in monoclonal gammopathies.
PMID: 27157252
ISSN: 1600-0609
CID: 3648742
The diagnosis and interventional management of pulmonary arteriovenous malformations
Morgan, Gareth J; Qureshi, Shakeel A
Pulmonary arteriovenous malformations (PAVM) describe a broad group of complex vascular malformations, often associated with multi-system diseases and with palliated complex congenital heart disease. They can have major clinical consequences, resulting in strokes, cerebral abscesses, cyanosis and, infrequently, rupture into the pleural space. The best approach to their investigation and interventional treatment is via a multidisciplinary pathway which should be focused in high-volume centres with on-site thoracic and cardiovascular surgical back-up. The availability of computed tomography (CT) and a broad cathlab inventory aid procedural planning and success. The results of interventional treatment are very encouraging and are applicable to an increasingly broad group of patients thanks to improvements in interventional techniques and a significant expansion of the inventory of vascular occlusion devices.
PMID: 27174107
ISSN: 1969-6213
CID: 3648752
Daratumumab Single Agent and Daratumumab Plus Pomalidomide and Dexametasone in Relapsed/Refractory Multiple Myeloma: A Real Life Retrospective Evaluation [Meeting Abstract]
Branca, Antonio; Buros, Amy; Yoon, Donghoon; Suva, Larry J.; Weinhold, Niels; Rasche, Leo; Schinke, Carolina; Thanendrarajan, Sharmilan; Mohan, Meera; Harcourt, Cerisse; Davies, Faith E.; van Rhee, Frits; Morgan, Gareth J.; Zangari, Maurizio
ISI:000394452505037
ISSN: 0006-4971
CID: 3647162
Clonal selection and double-hit events involving tumor suppressor genes underlie relapse in myeloma
Weinhold, Niels; Ashby, Cody; Rasche, Leo; Chavan, Shweta S; Stein, Caleb; Stephens, Owen W; Tytarenko, Ruslana; Bauer, Michael A; Meissner, Tobias; Deshpande, Shayu; Patel, Purvi H; Buzder, Timea; Molnar, Gabor; Peterson, Erich A; van Rhee, Frits; Zangari, Maurizio; Thanendrarajan, Sharmilan; Schinke, Carolina; Tian, Erming; Epstein, Joshua; Barlogie, Bart; Davies, Faith E; Heuck, Christoph J; Walker, Brian A; Morgan, Gareth J
To elucidate the mechanisms underlying relapse from chemotherapy in multiple myeloma, we performed a longitudinal study of 33 patients entered into Total Therapy protocols investigating them using gene expression profiling, high-resolution copy number arrays, and whole-exome sequencing. The study illustrates the mechanistic importance of acquired mutations in known myeloma driver genes and the critical nature of biallelic inactivation events affecting tumor suppressor genes, especially TP53, the end result being resistance to apoptosis and increased proliferation rates, which drive relapse by Darwinian-type clonal evolution. The number of copy number aberration changes and biallelic inactivation of tumor suppressor genes was increased in GEP70 high risk, consistent with genomic instability being a key feature of high risk. In conclusion, the study highlights the impact of acquired genetic events, which enhance the evolutionary fitness level of myeloma-propagating cells to survive multiagent chemotherapy and to result in relapse.
PMCID:5043128
PMID: 27516441
ISSN: 1528-0020
CID: 3648812
Multiple myeloma risk variant at 7p15.3 creates an IRF4-binding site and interferes with CDCA7L expression
Li, Ni; Johnson, David C; Weinhold, Niels; Studd, James B; Orlando, Giulia; Mirabella, Fabio; Mitchell, Jonathan S; Meissner, Tobias; Kaiser, Martin; Goldschmidt, Hartmut; Hemminki, Kari; Morgan, Gareth J; Houlston, Richard S
Genome-wide association studies have identified several risk loci for multiple myeloma (MM); however, the mechanisms by which they influence MM are unknown. Here by using genetic association data and functional characterization, we demonstrate that rs4487645 G>T, the most highly associated variant (P = 5.30 × 10-25), resides in an enhancer element 47 kb upstream of the transcription start site of c-Myc-interacting CDCA7L. The G-risk allele, associated with increased CDCA7L expression (P=1.95 × 10-36), increases IRF4 binding and the enhancer interacts with the CDCA7L promoter. We show that suppression of CDCA7L limits MM proliferation through apoptosis, and increased CDCA7L expression is associated with adverse patient survival. These findings implicate IRF4-mediated CDCA7L expression in MM biology and indicate how germline variation might confer susceptibility to MM.
PMCID:5123067
PMID: 27882933
ISSN: 2041-1723
CID: 3648842
The Spectrum and Clinical Impact of Epigenetic Modifier Mutations in Myeloma
Pawlyn, Charlotte; Kaiser, Martin F; Heuck, Christoph; Melchor, Lorenzo; Wardell, Christopher P; Murison, Alex; Chavan, Shweta S; Johnson, David C; Begum, Dil B; Dahir, Nasrin M; Proszek, Paula Z; Cairns, David A; Boyle, Eileen M; Jones, John R; Cook, Gordon; Drayson, Mark T; Owen, Roger G; Gregory, Walter M; Jackson, Graham H; Barlogie, Bart; Davies, Faith E; Walker, Brian A; Morgan, Gareth J
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Epigenetic dysregulation is known to be an important contributor to myeloma pathogenesis but, unlike other B-cell malignancies, the full spectrum of somatic mutations in epigenetic modifiers has not been reported previously. We sought to address this using the results from whole-exome sequencing in the context of a large prospective clinical trial of newly diagnosed patients and targeted sequencing in a cohort of previously treated patients for comparison. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN/METHODS:Whole-exome sequencing analysis of 463 presenting myeloma cases entered in the UK NCRI Myeloma XI study and targeted sequencing analysis of 156 previously treated cases from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (Little Rock, AR). We correlated the presence of mutations with clinical outcome from diagnosis and compared the mutations found at diagnosis with later stages of disease. RESULTS:In diagnostic myeloma patient samples, we identify significant mutations in genes encoding the histone 1 linker protein, previously identified in other B-cell malignancies. Our data suggest an adverse prognostic impact from the presence of lesions in genes encoding DNA methylation modifiers and the histone demethylase KDM6A/UTX The frequency of mutations in epigenetic modifiers appears to increase following treatment most notably in genes encoding histone methyltransferases and DNA methylation modifiers. CONCLUSIONS:Numerous mutations identified raise the possibility of targeted treatment strategies for patients either at diagnosis or relapse supporting the use of sequencing-based diagnostics in myeloma to help guide therapy as more epigenetic targeted agents become available. Clin Cancer Res; 22(23); 5783-94. ©2016 AACR.
PMCID:5124543
PMID: 27235425
ISSN: 1078-0432
CID: 3648762
Bendamustine, thalidomide and dexamethasone combination therapy for relapsed/refractory myeloma patients: results of the MUKone randomized dose selection trial
Schey, Steve; Brown, Sarah R; Tillotson, Avie-Lee; Yong, Kwee; Williams, Cathy; Davies, Faith; Morgan, Gareth; Cavenagh, Jamie; Cook, Gordon; Cook, Mark; Orti, Guillermo; Morris, Curly; Sherratt, Debbie; Flanagan, Louise; Gregory, Walter; Cavet, James
There is a significant unmet need in effective therapy for relapsed myeloma patients once they become refractory to bortezomib and lenalidomide. While data from the front line setting suggest bendamustine is superior to melphalan, there is no information defining optimal bendamustine dose in multiply-treated patients. We report a multi-centre randomized two-stage phase 2 trial simultaneously assessing deliverability and activity of two doses of bendamustine (60 mg/m2 vs. 100 mg/m2) days 1 and 8, thalidomide (100 mg) days 1-21 and low dose dexamethasone (20 mg) days 1, 8, 15 and 22 of a 28-d cycle. Ninety-four relapsing patients were treated on trial, with a median three prior treatment lines. A pre-planned interim deliverability and activity assessment led to closure of the 100 mg/m2 arm due to excess cytopenias, and led to amendment of entry criteria for cytopenias. Non-haematological toxicities including thromboembolism and neurotoxicity were infrequent. In the 60 mg/m2 arm, treatment was deliverable in 61.1% subjects and the partial response rate was 46.3% in the study eligible population, with 7.5 months progression-free survival. This study demonstrates bendamustine at 60 mg/m2 twice per month with thalidomide and dexamethasone is deliverable for repeated cycles in heavily pre-treated myeloma patients and has substantial clinical activity.
PMID: 25891006
ISSN: 1365-2141
CID: 3695122