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Biological and clinical significance of dysplastic hematopoiesis in patients with newly diagnosed multiple myeloma
Author(s) -
Catarina Maia,
Noemí Puig,
MaríaTeresa Cedena,
Ibai Goicoechea,
Rafael ValdésMas,
Iria Vázquez,
Carmen Chillón,
Paula AguirreRuiz,
Sarai Sarvide,
Francisco Javier Gracia-Aznárez,
Gorka AlkortaAranburu,
Marı́a José Calasanz,
Ramón GarcíaSánz,
Marcos González,
Norma C. Gutiérrez,
Joaquín MartínezLópez,
José J. Pérez,
Juana Merino,
Cristina Moreno,
Leire Burgos,
Diego Alignani,
Cirino Botta,
Felipe Prósper,
Sergio Matarraz,
Alberto Órfão,
Albert Oriol,
Ana-Isabel Teruel,
Raquel de Paz,
Felipe de Arriba,
MiguelTeodoro Hernández,
Luis Palomera,
Rafael Martínez,
Laura Rosiñol,
MaríaVictoria Mateos,
Juan José Lahuerta,
Joan Bladé,
Jesús F. San Miguel,
Bruno Paiva
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
blood
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.515
H-Index - 465
eISSN - 1528-0020
pISSN - 0006-4971
DOI - 10.1182/blood.2019003382
Subject(s) - monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance , multiple myeloma , international prognostic scoring system , medicine , bone marrow , hazard ratio , myelodysplastic syndromes , cd34 , clinical significance , oncology , lenalidomide , pathology , immunology , biology , stem cell , monoclonal , antibody , monoclonal antibody , confidence interval , genetics
Risk of developing myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) is significantly increased in both multiple myeloma (MM) and monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance, suggesting that it is therapy independent. However, the incidence and sequelae of dysplastic hematopoiesis at diagnosis are unknown. Here, we used multidimensional flow cytometry (MFC) to prospectively screen for the presence of MDS-associated phenotypic alterations (MDS-PA) in the bone marrow of 285 patients with MM enrolled in the PETHEMA/GEM2012MENOS65 trial (#NCT01916252). We investigated the clinical significance of monocytic MDS-PA in a larger series of 1252 patients enrolled in 4 PETHEMA/GEM protocols. At diagnosis, 33 (11.6%) of 285 cases displayed MDS-PA. Bulk and single-cell–targeted sequencing of MDS recurrently mutated genes in CD34+ progenitors (and dysplastic lineages) from 67 patients revealed clonal hematopoiesis in 13 (50%) of 26 cases with MDS-PA vs 9 (22%) of 41 without MDS-PA; TET2 and NRAS were the most frequently mutated genes. Dynamics of MDS-PA at diagnosis and after autologous transplant were evaluated in 86 of 285 patients and showed that in most cases (69 of 86 [80%]), MDS-PA either persisted or remained absent in patients with or without MDS-PA at diagnosis, respectively. Noteworthy, MDS-associated mutations infrequently emerged after high-dose therapy. Based on MFC profiling, patients with MDS-PA have altered hematopoiesis and T regulatory cell distribution in the tumor microenvironment. Importantly, the presence of monocytic MDS-PA at diagnosis anticipated greater risk of hematologic toxicity and was independently associated with inferior progression-free survival (hazard ratio, 1.5; P = .02) and overall survival (hazard ratio, 1.7; P = .01). This study reveals the biological and clinical significance of dysplastic hematopoiesis in newly diagnosed MM, which can be screened with moderate sensitivity using cost-effective MFC.

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