z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Higher-order connections between stereotyped subsets: implications for improved patient classification in CLL
Author(s) -
Andreas Agathangelidis,
Anastasia Chatzidimitriou,
Katerina Gemenetzi,
Véronique Giudicelli,
Maria Karypidou,
Karla Plevová,
Zadie Davis,
XiaoJie Yan,
Sabine Jeromin,
Christof Schneider,
Lone Bredo Pedersen,
Renee C. Tschumper,
LesleyAnn Sutton,
Panagiotis Baliakas,
Lydia Scarfò,
Ellen J. van Gastel,
Marine Armand,
Eugen Tausch,
Bella Biderman,
Constance Baer,
Davide Bagnara,
Alba Navarro,
Anne Langlois de Septenville,
Valentina Guido,
Gerlinde MitterbauerHohendanner,
Aleksandar Dimovski,
Christian Brieghel,
Sarah Lawless,
Manja Meggendorfer,
Kamila Brázdilová,
Matthias Ritgen,
Monica Facco,
Cristina Tresoldi,
Andrea Visentin,
Andrea Patriarca,
Mark Catherwood,
Lisa Bonello,
Andrey Sudarikov,
Katrina Vanura,
Maria Roumelioti,
Hana Skuhrová Francová,
Theodoros Moysiadis,
Silvio Veronese,
Krzysztof Giannopoulos,
Larry Mansouri,
Teodora Karan-Djurašević,
Raphael Sandaltzopoulos,
Csaba Bödör,
Franco Fais,
Ar P. Kater,
Irina Panovska,
Davide Rossi,
Salem Alshemmari,
Panagiotis Panagiotidis,
Paul Costeas,
Blanca Espinet,
Darko Antić,
Letizia Foroni,
Marco Montillo,
Livio Trentin,
Niki Stavroyianni,
Gianluca Gaïdano,
Paola Francia di Celle,
Carsten Utoft Niemann,
Elı́as Campo,
Αchilles Anagnostopoulos,
Christiane Pott,
Kirsten Fischer,
Michael Hallek,
David Oscier,
Stephan Stilgenbauer,
Claudia Haferlach,
Diane F. Jelinek,
Nicholas Chiorazzi,
Šárka Pospı́šilová,
MariePaule Lefranc,
Sofia Kossida,
Anton W. Langerak,
Chrysoula Belessi,
Frédéric Davi,
Richard Rosenquist,
Paolo Ghia,
Κώστας Σταματόπουλος
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.2020007039
Subject(s) - medicine , psychology
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is characterized by the existence of subsets of patients with (quasi)identical, stereotyped B-cell receptor (BcR) immunoglobulins. Patients in certain major stereotyped subsets often display remarkably consistent clinicobiological profiles, suggesting that the study of BcR immunoglobulin stereotypy in CLL has important implications for understanding disease pathophysiology and refining clinical decision-making. Nevertheless, several issues remain open, especially pertaining to the actual frequency of BcR immunoglobulin stereotypy and major subsets, as well as the existence of higher-order connections between individual subsets. To address these issues, we investigated clonotypic IGHV-IGHD-IGHJ gene rearrangements in a series of 29 856 patients with CLL, by far the largest series worldwide. We report that the stereotyped fraction of CLL peaks at 41% of the entire cohort and that all 19 previously identified major subsets retained their relative size and ranking, while 10 new ones emerged; overall, major stereotyped subsets had a cumulative frequency of 13.5%. Higher-level relationships were evident between subsets, particularly for major stereotyped subsets with unmutated IGHV genes (U-CLL), for which close relations with other subsets, termed “satellites,” were identified. Satellite subsets accounted for 3% of the entire cohort. These results confirm our previous notion that major subsets can be robustly identified and are consistent in relative size, hence representing distinct disease variants amenable to compartmentalized research with the potential of overcoming the pronounced heterogeneity of CLL. Furthermore, the existence of satellite subsets reveals a novel aspect of repertoire restriction with implications for refined molecular classification of CLL.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here
Accelerating Research

Address

John Eccles House
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom