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‘Intense’ end-of-life care may be common in HSCT recipients

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Fri, 10/19/2018 - 00:02
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‘Intense’ end-of-life care may be common in HSCT recipients

Photo by Diane Reid
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Patients who die within a year of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) tend to receive “medically intense” end-of-life care, an analysis suggests.

Researchers studied more than 2,000 patients who died within a year of allogeneic HSCT and found that a majority of the patients died in the hospital, and about half of them were admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU).

However, patient age, underlying diagnosis, and other factors influenced the likelihood of receiving intense end-of-life care.

For example, patients diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) or myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) were less likely than patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) to receive medically intense care.

Emily Johnston, MD, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and her colleagues reported these findings in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The researchers studied 2,135 patients in California who underwent inpatient HSCT and died within a year of the transplant (not as a result of peripartum events or trauma) between 2000 and 2013.

Fifty-three percent of the patients received some type of medically intense intervention, and 57% had at least two types of intense interventions.

Eighty-three percent of patients died in hospital, and 43% spent all of their last 30 days in the hospital.

Forty-nine percent of patients were admitted to the ICU, 45% were intubated, 22% underwent hemodialysis, and 8% received cardiopulmonary resuscitation.

Factors associated with intense care

The researchers said receipt of a medically intense intervention varied by age at death, underlying diagnosis, year of HSCT, location of care, and comorbidities. However, use of intense interventions did not vary according to sex, race/ethnicity, insurance type, or income.

Compared to patients age 60 and older, patients in the following age groups were more likely to receive medically intense interventions:

  • Ages 15 to 21—odds ratio (OR)=2.6 (P<0.001)
  • Ages 30 to 39—OR=1.8 (P<0.01)
  • Ages 40 to 49—OR=1.4 (P<0.05).

Patients with comorbidities were more likely to receive intense interventions as well. The OR was 1.6 (P<0.01) for patients with one comorbidity and 2.5 (P<0.001) for patients with two or more comorbidities.

Patients with AML or MDS were less likely than patients with ALL to receive a medically intense intervention—OR=0.7 (P<0.05).

Patients who were transplanted between 2000 and 2004 were less likely to receive an intense intervention than patients transplanted between 2010 and 2013—OR=0.7 (P<0.01).

Patients who changed hospitals between HSCT and death were less likely to receive an intense intervention than patients who stayed at the same hospital. The OR was 0.3 if they transferred to a community hospital and 0.4 if they transferred to a specialty hospital (P<0.001 for both).

Patients living in rural areas were less likely than urban patients to receive a medically intense intervention—OR=0.6 (P<0.05).

“From our data, we understand there is a correlation with high-intensity end-of-life care in patients who die within one year after receiving a stem cell transplant, but we are still unsure if that was the care they wanted,” Dr. Johnston said.

“The findings suggest that, as oncologists, we need to start having end-of-life care conversations earlier with patients to determine if a high-intensity treatment plan is consistent with their goals or if a lower-intensity treatment plan is best. It’s not a one-size-fits-all approach in end-of-life care.”

This research was supported by Stanford University. One study author reported relationships with Corvus Pharmaceuticals, Shire Pharmaceuticals, and Adaptive Biotechnologies. All other authors reported no conflicts.

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Photo by Diane Reid
Hospital room

Patients who die within a year of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) tend to receive “medically intense” end-of-life care, an analysis suggests.

Researchers studied more than 2,000 patients who died within a year of allogeneic HSCT and found that a majority of the patients died in the hospital, and about half of them were admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU).

However, patient age, underlying diagnosis, and other factors influenced the likelihood of receiving intense end-of-life care.

For example, patients diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) or myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) were less likely than patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) to receive medically intense care.

Emily Johnston, MD, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and her colleagues reported these findings in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The researchers studied 2,135 patients in California who underwent inpatient HSCT and died within a year of the transplant (not as a result of peripartum events or trauma) between 2000 and 2013.

Fifty-three percent of the patients received some type of medically intense intervention, and 57% had at least two types of intense interventions.

Eighty-three percent of patients died in hospital, and 43% spent all of their last 30 days in the hospital.

Forty-nine percent of patients were admitted to the ICU, 45% were intubated, 22% underwent hemodialysis, and 8% received cardiopulmonary resuscitation.

Factors associated with intense care

The researchers said receipt of a medically intense intervention varied by age at death, underlying diagnosis, year of HSCT, location of care, and comorbidities. However, use of intense interventions did not vary according to sex, race/ethnicity, insurance type, or income.

Compared to patients age 60 and older, patients in the following age groups were more likely to receive medically intense interventions:

  • Ages 15 to 21—odds ratio (OR)=2.6 (P<0.001)
  • Ages 30 to 39—OR=1.8 (P<0.01)
  • Ages 40 to 49—OR=1.4 (P<0.05).

Patients with comorbidities were more likely to receive intense interventions as well. The OR was 1.6 (P<0.01) for patients with one comorbidity and 2.5 (P<0.001) for patients with two or more comorbidities.

Patients with AML or MDS were less likely than patients with ALL to receive a medically intense intervention—OR=0.7 (P<0.05).

Patients who were transplanted between 2000 and 2004 were less likely to receive an intense intervention than patients transplanted between 2010 and 2013—OR=0.7 (P<0.01).

Patients who changed hospitals between HSCT and death were less likely to receive an intense intervention than patients who stayed at the same hospital. The OR was 0.3 if they transferred to a community hospital and 0.4 if they transferred to a specialty hospital (P<0.001 for both).

Patients living in rural areas were less likely than urban patients to receive a medically intense intervention—OR=0.6 (P<0.05).

“From our data, we understand there is a correlation with high-intensity end-of-life care in patients who die within one year after receiving a stem cell transplant, but we are still unsure if that was the care they wanted,” Dr. Johnston said.

“The findings suggest that, as oncologists, we need to start having end-of-life care conversations earlier with patients to determine if a high-intensity treatment plan is consistent with their goals or if a lower-intensity treatment plan is best. It’s not a one-size-fits-all approach in end-of-life care.”

This research was supported by Stanford University. One study author reported relationships with Corvus Pharmaceuticals, Shire Pharmaceuticals, and Adaptive Biotechnologies. All other authors reported no conflicts.

Photo by Diane Reid
Hospital room

Patients who die within a year of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) tend to receive “medically intense” end-of-life care, an analysis suggests.

Researchers studied more than 2,000 patients who died within a year of allogeneic HSCT and found that a majority of the patients died in the hospital, and about half of them were admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU).

However, patient age, underlying diagnosis, and other factors influenced the likelihood of receiving intense end-of-life care.

For example, patients diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) or myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) were less likely than patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) to receive medically intense care.

Emily Johnston, MD, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and her colleagues reported these findings in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

The researchers studied 2,135 patients in California who underwent inpatient HSCT and died within a year of the transplant (not as a result of peripartum events or trauma) between 2000 and 2013.

Fifty-three percent of the patients received some type of medically intense intervention, and 57% had at least two types of intense interventions.

Eighty-three percent of patients died in hospital, and 43% spent all of their last 30 days in the hospital.

Forty-nine percent of patients were admitted to the ICU, 45% were intubated, 22% underwent hemodialysis, and 8% received cardiopulmonary resuscitation.

Factors associated with intense care

The researchers said receipt of a medically intense intervention varied by age at death, underlying diagnosis, year of HSCT, location of care, and comorbidities. However, use of intense interventions did not vary according to sex, race/ethnicity, insurance type, or income.

Compared to patients age 60 and older, patients in the following age groups were more likely to receive medically intense interventions:

  • Ages 15 to 21—odds ratio (OR)=2.6 (P<0.001)
  • Ages 30 to 39—OR=1.8 (P<0.01)
  • Ages 40 to 49—OR=1.4 (P<0.05).

Patients with comorbidities were more likely to receive intense interventions as well. The OR was 1.6 (P<0.01) for patients with one comorbidity and 2.5 (P<0.001) for patients with two or more comorbidities.

Patients with AML or MDS were less likely than patients with ALL to receive a medically intense intervention—OR=0.7 (P<0.05).

Patients who were transplanted between 2000 and 2004 were less likely to receive an intense intervention than patients transplanted between 2010 and 2013—OR=0.7 (P<0.01).

Patients who changed hospitals between HSCT and death were less likely to receive an intense intervention than patients who stayed at the same hospital. The OR was 0.3 if they transferred to a community hospital and 0.4 if they transferred to a specialty hospital (P<0.001 for both).

Patients living in rural areas were less likely than urban patients to receive a medically intense intervention—OR=0.6 (P<0.05).

“From our data, we understand there is a correlation with high-intensity end-of-life care in patients who die within one year after receiving a stem cell transplant, but we are still unsure if that was the care they wanted,” Dr. Johnston said.

“The findings suggest that, as oncologists, we need to start having end-of-life care conversations earlier with patients to determine if a high-intensity treatment plan is consistent with their goals or if a lower-intensity treatment plan is best. It’s not a one-size-fits-all approach in end-of-life care.”

This research was supported by Stanford University. One study author reported relationships with Corvus Pharmaceuticals, Shire Pharmaceuticals, and Adaptive Biotechnologies. All other authors reported no conflicts.

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Researchers develop genetics-based prognostic tool for MDS

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Researchers develop genetics-based prognostic tool for MDS

Micrograph showing MDS

Researchers have developed a new risk model for primary myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) that integrates genetic and clinical information.

The research team considered the current standard for prognostication—the revised International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS-R)—to be too complex, limited to newly diagnosed cases, and missing information on mutations and age.

So they devised a “simpler and more contemporary” prognostic system, the Mayo Alliance Prognostic Model for MDS.

The team, from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and the National Taiwan University Hospital (NTUH), described the new model in Mayo Clinic Proceedings.

Lead author Ayalew Tefferi, MD, of the Mayo Clinic, said the new model “is not an enhancement of the international prognostic scoring system tool, it's a complete makeover."

The team analyzed mutation information from 357 patients with primary MDS or leukemic transformation treated at the Mayo Clinic from the end of December 1994 through mid-December 2017.

The patients were a median age of 74 and 70% were males.

They compared the Mayo patients to 328 NTUH patients, who were a median age of 66 and 65% were males.

Multivariate analysis of the Mayo cohort identified the following as predictors of inferior overall survival:

  • Monosomal karyotype (hazard ratio [HR], 5.2; 95% CI, 3.1-8.6)
  • Non-monosomal karyotype abnormalities other than single/double del(5q) (HR, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.3-2.6)
  • RUNX1 (HR, 2.0; 95% CI, 1.2-3.1)
  • ASXL1 (HR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.2-2.3) mutations
  • Absence of SF3B1 mutations (HR, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.1-2.4)
  • Age greater than 70 years (HR, 2.2; 95% CI, 1.6-3.1)
  • Hemoglobin level less than 8 g/dL in women or less than 9 g/dL in men (HR, 2.3; 95% CI, 1.7-3.1)
  • Platelet count less than 75 x 109/L (HR, 1.5; 95% CI, 1.1-2.1)
  • 10% or more bone marrow blasts (HR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.1-2.8)

They then provided values to reflect the prognostic contribution of each of the above predictors and devised the new 4-tiered Mayo prognostic model.

Median 5-year overall survival rates in the 4 categories in the Mayo model were 73% (low risk), 34% (intermediate-1), 7% (intermediate-2), and 0% (high risk; 9-month median survival).

The team then validated the Mayo alliance model by using the NTUH cohort and compared it to the IPSS-R.

The investigators were able to confirm superior predictive accuracy of their model and a substantial discordance between the the Mayo model and the IPSS-R in terms of the pattern of risk distribution.

Examples of discordance included:

  • More than 25% of patients belonging to the high-risk category according to the Mayo alliance model were classified as IPSS-R low or intermediate risk
  • Almost 50% of patients with intermediate-2 risk category according to the Mayo alliance model were classified as IPSS-R very low or low risk
  • Almost 50% of patients with IPSS-R very low risk were classified as intermediate-2 or intermediate-1 risk according to the Mayo alliance model

The authors wrote that this “suggests a fundamental and not incremental advantage for the new Mayo alliance model.” 

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Micrograph showing MDS

Researchers have developed a new risk model for primary myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) that integrates genetic and clinical information.

The research team considered the current standard for prognostication—the revised International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS-R)—to be too complex, limited to newly diagnosed cases, and missing information on mutations and age.

So they devised a “simpler and more contemporary” prognostic system, the Mayo Alliance Prognostic Model for MDS.

The team, from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and the National Taiwan University Hospital (NTUH), described the new model in Mayo Clinic Proceedings.

Lead author Ayalew Tefferi, MD, of the Mayo Clinic, said the new model “is not an enhancement of the international prognostic scoring system tool, it's a complete makeover."

The team analyzed mutation information from 357 patients with primary MDS or leukemic transformation treated at the Mayo Clinic from the end of December 1994 through mid-December 2017.

The patients were a median age of 74 and 70% were males.

They compared the Mayo patients to 328 NTUH patients, who were a median age of 66 and 65% were males.

Multivariate analysis of the Mayo cohort identified the following as predictors of inferior overall survival:

  • Monosomal karyotype (hazard ratio [HR], 5.2; 95% CI, 3.1-8.6)
  • Non-monosomal karyotype abnormalities other than single/double del(5q) (HR, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.3-2.6)
  • RUNX1 (HR, 2.0; 95% CI, 1.2-3.1)
  • ASXL1 (HR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.2-2.3) mutations
  • Absence of SF3B1 mutations (HR, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.1-2.4)
  • Age greater than 70 years (HR, 2.2; 95% CI, 1.6-3.1)
  • Hemoglobin level less than 8 g/dL in women or less than 9 g/dL in men (HR, 2.3; 95% CI, 1.7-3.1)
  • Platelet count less than 75 x 109/L (HR, 1.5; 95% CI, 1.1-2.1)
  • 10% or more bone marrow blasts (HR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.1-2.8)

They then provided values to reflect the prognostic contribution of each of the above predictors and devised the new 4-tiered Mayo prognostic model.

Median 5-year overall survival rates in the 4 categories in the Mayo model were 73% (low risk), 34% (intermediate-1), 7% (intermediate-2), and 0% (high risk; 9-month median survival).

The team then validated the Mayo alliance model by using the NTUH cohort and compared it to the IPSS-R.

The investigators were able to confirm superior predictive accuracy of their model and a substantial discordance between the the Mayo model and the IPSS-R in terms of the pattern of risk distribution.

Examples of discordance included:

  • More than 25% of patients belonging to the high-risk category according to the Mayo alliance model were classified as IPSS-R low or intermediate risk
  • Almost 50% of patients with intermediate-2 risk category according to the Mayo alliance model were classified as IPSS-R very low or low risk
  • Almost 50% of patients with IPSS-R very low risk were classified as intermediate-2 or intermediate-1 risk according to the Mayo alliance model

The authors wrote that this “suggests a fundamental and not incremental advantage for the new Mayo alliance model.” 

Micrograph showing MDS

Researchers have developed a new risk model for primary myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) that integrates genetic and clinical information.

The research team considered the current standard for prognostication—the revised International Prognostic Scoring System (IPSS-R)—to be too complex, limited to newly diagnosed cases, and missing information on mutations and age.

So they devised a “simpler and more contemporary” prognostic system, the Mayo Alliance Prognostic Model for MDS.

The team, from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and the National Taiwan University Hospital (NTUH), described the new model in Mayo Clinic Proceedings.

Lead author Ayalew Tefferi, MD, of the Mayo Clinic, said the new model “is not an enhancement of the international prognostic scoring system tool, it's a complete makeover."

The team analyzed mutation information from 357 patients with primary MDS or leukemic transformation treated at the Mayo Clinic from the end of December 1994 through mid-December 2017.

The patients were a median age of 74 and 70% were males.

They compared the Mayo patients to 328 NTUH patients, who were a median age of 66 and 65% were males.

Multivariate analysis of the Mayo cohort identified the following as predictors of inferior overall survival:

  • Monosomal karyotype (hazard ratio [HR], 5.2; 95% CI, 3.1-8.6)
  • Non-monosomal karyotype abnormalities other than single/double del(5q) (HR, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.3-2.6)
  • RUNX1 (HR, 2.0; 95% CI, 1.2-3.1)
  • ASXL1 (HR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.2-2.3) mutations
  • Absence of SF3B1 mutations (HR, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.1-2.4)
  • Age greater than 70 years (HR, 2.2; 95% CI, 1.6-3.1)
  • Hemoglobin level less than 8 g/dL in women or less than 9 g/dL in men (HR, 2.3; 95% CI, 1.7-3.1)
  • Platelet count less than 75 x 109/L (HR, 1.5; 95% CI, 1.1-2.1)
  • 10% or more bone marrow blasts (HR, 1.7; 95% CI, 1.1-2.8)

They then provided values to reflect the prognostic contribution of each of the above predictors and devised the new 4-tiered Mayo prognostic model.

Median 5-year overall survival rates in the 4 categories in the Mayo model were 73% (low risk), 34% (intermediate-1), 7% (intermediate-2), and 0% (high risk; 9-month median survival).

The team then validated the Mayo alliance model by using the NTUH cohort and compared it to the IPSS-R.

The investigators were able to confirm superior predictive accuracy of their model and a substantial discordance between the the Mayo model and the IPSS-R in terms of the pattern of risk distribution.

Examples of discordance included:

  • More than 25% of patients belonging to the high-risk category according to the Mayo alliance model were classified as IPSS-R low or intermediate risk
  • Almost 50% of patients with intermediate-2 risk category according to the Mayo alliance model were classified as IPSS-R very low or low risk
  • Almost 50% of patients with IPSS-R very low risk were classified as intermediate-2 or intermediate-1 risk according to the Mayo alliance model

The authors wrote that this “suggests a fundamental and not incremental advantage for the new Mayo alliance model.” 

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Sequencing informs prognosis after HSCT in MDS

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Sequencing informs prognosis after HSCT in MDS

 

Photo by Chad McNeeley
HSCT preparation

 

Gene sequencing early after transplant may provide important prognostic information in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), according to a new study.

 

Patients who had disease-associated mutations in the bone marrow 30 days after hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) were significantly more likely to experience disease progression and have lower rates of progression-free survival (PFS) at 1 year.

 

“Using our sequencing method, we’re identifying residual tumor cells before a pathologist could see them under the microscope and before a patient develops symptoms,” said Matthew J. Walter, MD, of Washington University in St. Louis, Mo.

 

“At that moment, there may be time to intervene in ways that could delay the cancer from coming back or potentially prevent it completely.”

 

Dr. Walter and his colleagues described results with their sequencing method in The New England Journal of Medicine.

 

The researchers sequenced bone marrow and skin (control) samples from 90 adults with MDS who underwent allogeneic HSCT.

 

The team used enhanced exome sequencing to detect mutations before HSCT and evaluated mutation clearance using error-corrected sequencing to genotype mutations in bone marrow samples collected 30 days after HSCT.

 

The researchers detected at least one validated somatic mutation in the pre-HSCT samples from 86 of 90 patients.

 

Of the 86 patients, 32 had at least one mutation with a maximum variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% detected 30 days after HSCT. The frequency is equivalent to 1 heterozygous mutant cell per 100 cells, the researchers explained.

 

Patients who experienced disease progression had mutations with a median maximum variant allele frequency of 0.9%, compared with 0% for patients who did not progress (P<0.001).

 

Progression occurred in 53.1% of patients who had one or more mutations with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% at 30 days, whereas progression occurred in 13% of patients who did not have such mutations. After adjusting for conditioning regimen, the hazard ratio (HR) for disease progression in the patients with mutations was 3.86 (P<0.001).

 

The 1-year PFS rate was 31.3% in patients who had one or more mutations with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% at 30 days and 59.3% in patients who did not have the mutations. After adjusting for conditioning, the HR for progression or death was 2.22 (P=0.005).

 

The researchers noted that PFS was lower in patients who had received reduced-intensity conditioning and had at least one persistent mutation with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% at day 30 (P≤0.001), when compared to other combinations of conditioning regimen and mutation status.

 

In multivariable analyses, the presence of a mutation with at least 0.5% variant allele frequency was associated with a more than four-fold risk of progression (HR, 4.48; P<0.001) and a more than two-fold risk of progression or death (HR, 2.39; P=0.002).

 

“Now that we have detected mutations early and shown that it predicts a higher risk of recurrence, we want to determine the best course of action for those high-risk patients,” Dr. Walter said.

 

He and his colleagues acknowledged that the high-coverage exome sequencing technique used for this study is not routinely available in the clinic. Therefore, the researchers also analyzed samples using a subset of genes that are usually included in gene sequencing panels for MDS and acute myeloid leukemia.

 

The researchers noted that this 40-gene panel revealed fewer patients (n=68; 79%) with mutations, but “the prognostic value of detection of measurable residual disease was still highly clinically significant.”

 

With this approach, the presence of at least one mutation with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% 30 days after HSCT was associated with a higher risk of disease progression at 1 year (HR, 3.39; P=0.001) and a higher risk of progression or death at 1 year (HR, 2.09; P=0.02).

 

 

 

This study was supported by grants from the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society and other groups.

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Photo by Chad McNeeley
HSCT preparation

 

Gene sequencing early after transplant may provide important prognostic information in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), according to a new study.

 

Patients who had disease-associated mutations in the bone marrow 30 days after hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) were significantly more likely to experience disease progression and have lower rates of progression-free survival (PFS) at 1 year.

 

“Using our sequencing method, we’re identifying residual tumor cells before a pathologist could see them under the microscope and before a patient develops symptoms,” said Matthew J. Walter, MD, of Washington University in St. Louis, Mo.

 

“At that moment, there may be time to intervene in ways that could delay the cancer from coming back or potentially prevent it completely.”

 

Dr. Walter and his colleagues described results with their sequencing method in The New England Journal of Medicine.

 

The researchers sequenced bone marrow and skin (control) samples from 90 adults with MDS who underwent allogeneic HSCT.

 

The team used enhanced exome sequencing to detect mutations before HSCT and evaluated mutation clearance using error-corrected sequencing to genotype mutations in bone marrow samples collected 30 days after HSCT.

 

The researchers detected at least one validated somatic mutation in the pre-HSCT samples from 86 of 90 patients.

 

Of the 86 patients, 32 had at least one mutation with a maximum variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% detected 30 days after HSCT. The frequency is equivalent to 1 heterozygous mutant cell per 100 cells, the researchers explained.

 

Patients who experienced disease progression had mutations with a median maximum variant allele frequency of 0.9%, compared with 0% for patients who did not progress (P<0.001).

 

Progression occurred in 53.1% of patients who had one or more mutations with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% at 30 days, whereas progression occurred in 13% of patients who did not have such mutations. After adjusting for conditioning regimen, the hazard ratio (HR) for disease progression in the patients with mutations was 3.86 (P<0.001).

 

The 1-year PFS rate was 31.3% in patients who had one or more mutations with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% at 30 days and 59.3% in patients who did not have the mutations. After adjusting for conditioning, the HR for progression or death was 2.22 (P=0.005).

 

The researchers noted that PFS was lower in patients who had received reduced-intensity conditioning and had at least one persistent mutation with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% at day 30 (P≤0.001), when compared to other combinations of conditioning regimen and mutation status.

 

In multivariable analyses, the presence of a mutation with at least 0.5% variant allele frequency was associated with a more than four-fold risk of progression (HR, 4.48; P<0.001) and a more than two-fold risk of progression or death (HR, 2.39; P=0.002).

 

“Now that we have detected mutations early and shown that it predicts a higher risk of recurrence, we want to determine the best course of action for those high-risk patients,” Dr. Walter said.

 

He and his colleagues acknowledged that the high-coverage exome sequencing technique used for this study is not routinely available in the clinic. Therefore, the researchers also analyzed samples using a subset of genes that are usually included in gene sequencing panels for MDS and acute myeloid leukemia.

 

The researchers noted that this 40-gene panel revealed fewer patients (n=68; 79%) with mutations, but “the prognostic value of detection of measurable residual disease was still highly clinically significant.”

 

With this approach, the presence of at least one mutation with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% 30 days after HSCT was associated with a higher risk of disease progression at 1 year (HR, 3.39; P=0.001) and a higher risk of progression or death at 1 year (HR, 2.09; P=0.02).

 

 

 

This study was supported by grants from the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society and other groups.

 

Photo by Chad McNeeley
HSCT preparation

 

Gene sequencing early after transplant may provide important prognostic information in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), according to a new study.

 

Patients who had disease-associated mutations in the bone marrow 30 days after hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) were significantly more likely to experience disease progression and have lower rates of progression-free survival (PFS) at 1 year.

 

“Using our sequencing method, we’re identifying residual tumor cells before a pathologist could see them under the microscope and before a patient develops symptoms,” said Matthew J. Walter, MD, of Washington University in St. Louis, Mo.

 

“At that moment, there may be time to intervene in ways that could delay the cancer from coming back or potentially prevent it completely.”

 

Dr. Walter and his colleagues described results with their sequencing method in The New England Journal of Medicine.

 

The researchers sequenced bone marrow and skin (control) samples from 90 adults with MDS who underwent allogeneic HSCT.

 

The team used enhanced exome sequencing to detect mutations before HSCT and evaluated mutation clearance using error-corrected sequencing to genotype mutations in bone marrow samples collected 30 days after HSCT.

 

The researchers detected at least one validated somatic mutation in the pre-HSCT samples from 86 of 90 patients.

 

Of the 86 patients, 32 had at least one mutation with a maximum variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% detected 30 days after HSCT. The frequency is equivalent to 1 heterozygous mutant cell per 100 cells, the researchers explained.

 

Patients who experienced disease progression had mutations with a median maximum variant allele frequency of 0.9%, compared with 0% for patients who did not progress (P<0.001).

 

Progression occurred in 53.1% of patients who had one or more mutations with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% at 30 days, whereas progression occurred in 13% of patients who did not have such mutations. After adjusting for conditioning regimen, the hazard ratio (HR) for disease progression in the patients with mutations was 3.86 (P<0.001).

 

The 1-year PFS rate was 31.3% in patients who had one or more mutations with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% at 30 days and 59.3% in patients who did not have the mutations. After adjusting for conditioning, the HR for progression or death was 2.22 (P=0.005).

 

The researchers noted that PFS was lower in patients who had received reduced-intensity conditioning and had at least one persistent mutation with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% at day 30 (P≤0.001), when compared to other combinations of conditioning regimen and mutation status.

 

In multivariable analyses, the presence of a mutation with at least 0.5% variant allele frequency was associated with a more than four-fold risk of progression (HR, 4.48; P<0.001) and a more than two-fold risk of progression or death (HR, 2.39; P=0.002).

 

“Now that we have detected mutations early and shown that it predicts a higher risk of recurrence, we want to determine the best course of action for those high-risk patients,” Dr. Walter said.

 

He and his colleagues acknowledged that the high-coverage exome sequencing technique used for this study is not routinely available in the clinic. Therefore, the researchers also analyzed samples using a subset of genes that are usually included in gene sequencing panels for MDS and acute myeloid leukemia.

 

The researchers noted that this 40-gene panel revealed fewer patients (n=68; 79%) with mutations, but “the prognostic value of detection of measurable residual disease was still highly clinically significant.”

 

With this approach, the presence of at least one mutation with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% 30 days after HSCT was associated with a higher risk of disease progression at 1 year (HR, 3.39; P=0.001) and a higher risk of progression or death at 1 year (HR, 2.09; P=0.02).

 

 

 

This study was supported by grants from the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society and other groups.

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MDS posttransplant gene sequencing prognostic for progression

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For patients with myelodysplastic syndrome, gene sequencing of bone marrow samples early after bone marrow transplant with curative intent may provide important prognostic information.

Among 86 patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), higher maximum variant allele frequency of residual disease–associated mutations at 30 days posttransplantation was significantly associated with disease progression and lower rates of progression-free survival (PFS) at 1 year, reported Eric J. Duncavage, MD, from Washington University in St. Louis, and his colleagues.

“Although this exploratory study has limitations, our results suggest that sequencing-based detection of tumor cells and measurable residual disease after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation has prognostic significance for patients with MDS,” they wrote in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Risk of progression was significantly higher among patients who had undergone reduced-intensity conditioning prior to hematopoietic stem cell transplants (HSCT) than among patients who had undergone myeloablative conditioning regimens.

To get a better handle on the significance of molecular predictors of disease progression after HSCT, the authors used enhanced exome sequencing to evaluate paired samples of bone marrow and control DNA from normal skin, and error-corrected sequencing to identify somatic single-nucleotide variant mutations in posttransplant samples.

They detected at least one validated somatic mutation in the pretransplant samples from 86 of 90 patients. Of the 86 patients, 32 had at least one mutation with a maximum variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% detected 30 days after transplantation. The frequency is equivalent to 1 heterozygous mutant cell per 100 cells, the authors explained.

Patients who experienced disease progression had mutations with a median maximum variant allele frequency of 0.9%, compared with 0% for patients who did not have progression (P less than .001).

In all, 53.1% of patients with one or more mutations with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% at 30 days had disease progression within a year, compared with 13% of patients who did not have the mutations, even after adjustment for the type of conditioning regimen. The hazard ratio (HR) for disease progression in the patients with mutations was 3.86 (P less than .001).

The association between the presence of one or more mutations with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% with increased risk of disease progression was also seen at 100 days, even after adjustment for conditioning regimen (66.7% vs. 0%; HR, 6.52; P less than .001). In multivariable analysis controlling for prognostic scores, maximum variant allele frequency at 30 days, TP53 mutation status and conditioning regimen, the presence of a mutation with at least 0.5% variant allele frequency was associated with a more than fourfold risk of progression, including when the revised International Prognostic Scoring System score and conditioning regimen were considered as covariates. (HR, 4.48; P less than .001),

A separate multivariable analysis of PFS controlling for maximum variant allele frequency at day 30, conditioning regimen, age at transplantation, and type of MDS showed that mutations were associated with a more than twofold risk of progression or death (HR, 2.39; P = .002).

This analysis also showed that secondary acute myeloid leukemia was associated with worse PFS, compared with primary MDS (HR, 2.24; P = .001).

The investigators acknowledged that the high-coverage exome sequencing technique used for the study is not routinely available in the clinic. To control for this, they also looked at their data using a subset of genes that are usually included in gene sequencing panels for MDS and AML.

“Although we identified fewer patients with mutations with the use of this approach than with enhanced exome sequencing, the prognostic value of detection of measurable residual disease was still highly clinically significant,” they wrote.

The study was supported by grants from the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, Edward P. Evans Foundation, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Gabrielle’s Angel Foundation, and the Lottie Caroline Hardy Trust. Dr. Duncavage disclosed personal fees from AbbVie and Cofactor Genomics. The majority of coauthors reported nothing to disclose.

SOURCE: Duncavage EJ et al. N Engl J Med 2018;379:1028-41.

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For patients with myelodysplastic syndrome, gene sequencing of bone marrow samples early after bone marrow transplant with curative intent may provide important prognostic information.

Among 86 patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), higher maximum variant allele frequency of residual disease–associated mutations at 30 days posttransplantation was significantly associated with disease progression and lower rates of progression-free survival (PFS) at 1 year, reported Eric J. Duncavage, MD, from Washington University in St. Louis, and his colleagues.

“Although this exploratory study has limitations, our results suggest that sequencing-based detection of tumor cells and measurable residual disease after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation has prognostic significance for patients with MDS,” they wrote in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Risk of progression was significantly higher among patients who had undergone reduced-intensity conditioning prior to hematopoietic stem cell transplants (HSCT) than among patients who had undergone myeloablative conditioning regimens.

To get a better handle on the significance of molecular predictors of disease progression after HSCT, the authors used enhanced exome sequencing to evaluate paired samples of bone marrow and control DNA from normal skin, and error-corrected sequencing to identify somatic single-nucleotide variant mutations in posttransplant samples.

They detected at least one validated somatic mutation in the pretransplant samples from 86 of 90 patients. Of the 86 patients, 32 had at least one mutation with a maximum variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% detected 30 days after transplantation. The frequency is equivalent to 1 heterozygous mutant cell per 100 cells, the authors explained.

Patients who experienced disease progression had mutations with a median maximum variant allele frequency of 0.9%, compared with 0% for patients who did not have progression (P less than .001).

In all, 53.1% of patients with one or more mutations with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% at 30 days had disease progression within a year, compared with 13% of patients who did not have the mutations, even after adjustment for the type of conditioning regimen. The hazard ratio (HR) for disease progression in the patients with mutations was 3.86 (P less than .001).

The association between the presence of one or more mutations with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% with increased risk of disease progression was also seen at 100 days, even after adjustment for conditioning regimen (66.7% vs. 0%; HR, 6.52; P less than .001). In multivariable analysis controlling for prognostic scores, maximum variant allele frequency at 30 days, TP53 mutation status and conditioning regimen, the presence of a mutation with at least 0.5% variant allele frequency was associated with a more than fourfold risk of progression, including when the revised International Prognostic Scoring System score and conditioning regimen were considered as covariates. (HR, 4.48; P less than .001),

A separate multivariable analysis of PFS controlling for maximum variant allele frequency at day 30, conditioning regimen, age at transplantation, and type of MDS showed that mutations were associated with a more than twofold risk of progression or death (HR, 2.39; P = .002).

This analysis also showed that secondary acute myeloid leukemia was associated with worse PFS, compared with primary MDS (HR, 2.24; P = .001).

The investigators acknowledged that the high-coverage exome sequencing technique used for the study is not routinely available in the clinic. To control for this, they also looked at their data using a subset of genes that are usually included in gene sequencing panels for MDS and AML.

“Although we identified fewer patients with mutations with the use of this approach than with enhanced exome sequencing, the prognostic value of detection of measurable residual disease was still highly clinically significant,” they wrote.

The study was supported by grants from the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, Edward P. Evans Foundation, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Gabrielle’s Angel Foundation, and the Lottie Caroline Hardy Trust. Dr. Duncavage disclosed personal fees from AbbVie and Cofactor Genomics. The majority of coauthors reported nothing to disclose.

SOURCE: Duncavage EJ et al. N Engl J Med 2018;379:1028-41.

 

For patients with myelodysplastic syndrome, gene sequencing of bone marrow samples early after bone marrow transplant with curative intent may provide important prognostic information.

Among 86 patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), higher maximum variant allele frequency of residual disease–associated mutations at 30 days posttransplantation was significantly associated with disease progression and lower rates of progression-free survival (PFS) at 1 year, reported Eric J. Duncavage, MD, from Washington University in St. Louis, and his colleagues.

“Although this exploratory study has limitations, our results suggest that sequencing-based detection of tumor cells and measurable residual disease after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation has prognostic significance for patients with MDS,” they wrote in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Risk of progression was significantly higher among patients who had undergone reduced-intensity conditioning prior to hematopoietic stem cell transplants (HSCT) than among patients who had undergone myeloablative conditioning regimens.

To get a better handle on the significance of molecular predictors of disease progression after HSCT, the authors used enhanced exome sequencing to evaluate paired samples of bone marrow and control DNA from normal skin, and error-corrected sequencing to identify somatic single-nucleotide variant mutations in posttransplant samples.

They detected at least one validated somatic mutation in the pretransplant samples from 86 of 90 patients. Of the 86 patients, 32 had at least one mutation with a maximum variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% detected 30 days after transplantation. The frequency is equivalent to 1 heterozygous mutant cell per 100 cells, the authors explained.

Patients who experienced disease progression had mutations with a median maximum variant allele frequency of 0.9%, compared with 0% for patients who did not have progression (P less than .001).

In all, 53.1% of patients with one or more mutations with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% at 30 days had disease progression within a year, compared with 13% of patients who did not have the mutations, even after adjustment for the type of conditioning regimen. The hazard ratio (HR) for disease progression in the patients with mutations was 3.86 (P less than .001).

The association between the presence of one or more mutations with a variant allele frequency of at least 0.5% with increased risk of disease progression was also seen at 100 days, even after adjustment for conditioning regimen (66.7% vs. 0%; HR, 6.52; P less than .001). In multivariable analysis controlling for prognostic scores, maximum variant allele frequency at 30 days, TP53 mutation status and conditioning regimen, the presence of a mutation with at least 0.5% variant allele frequency was associated with a more than fourfold risk of progression, including when the revised International Prognostic Scoring System score and conditioning regimen were considered as covariates. (HR, 4.48; P less than .001),

A separate multivariable analysis of PFS controlling for maximum variant allele frequency at day 30, conditioning regimen, age at transplantation, and type of MDS showed that mutations were associated with a more than twofold risk of progression or death (HR, 2.39; P = .002).

This analysis also showed that secondary acute myeloid leukemia was associated with worse PFS, compared with primary MDS (HR, 2.24; P = .001).

The investigators acknowledged that the high-coverage exome sequencing technique used for the study is not routinely available in the clinic. To control for this, they also looked at their data using a subset of genes that are usually included in gene sequencing panels for MDS and AML.

“Although we identified fewer patients with mutations with the use of this approach than with enhanced exome sequencing, the prognostic value of detection of measurable residual disease was still highly clinically significant,” they wrote.

The study was supported by grants from the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, Edward P. Evans Foundation, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Gabrielle’s Angel Foundation, and the Lottie Caroline Hardy Trust. Dr. Duncavage disclosed personal fees from AbbVie and Cofactor Genomics. The majority of coauthors reported nothing to disclose.

SOURCE: Duncavage EJ et al. N Engl J Med 2018;379:1028-41.

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Key clinical point: Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS)–associated mutations present 30 days after stem cell transplant may be predict disease progression and survival.

Major finding: Higher maximum variant allele frequency of residual disease–associated mutations at 30 days posttransplantation was significantly associated with disease progression and lower rates of progression-free survival at 1 year.

Study details: Exploratory study of mutations pre- and posttransplant in 90 patients with primary or therapy-related MDS or secondary acute myeloid leukemia.

Disclosures: The study was supported by grants from the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, Edward P. Evans Foundation, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Gabrielle’s Angel Foundation, and the Lottie Caroline Hardy Trust. Dr. Duncavage disclosed personal fees from AbbVie and Cofactor Genomics. The majority of the coauthors reported nothing to disclose.

Source: Duncavage EJ et al. N Engl J Med 2018;379:1028-41.

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HIF1A could be therapeutic target for MDS

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HIF1A could be therapeutic target for MDS

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The transcription factor HIF1A could be a therapeutic target for “a broad spectrum” of patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), according to researchers.

Preclinical experiments indicated that HIF1A fuels the biological processes that cause different types of MDS.

Researchers also found that inhibiting HIF1A reversed MDS symptoms and prolonged survival in mouse models of MDS.

Gang Huang, PhD, of Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center in Ohio, and his colleagues reported these findings in Cancer Discovery.

The researchers identified HIF1A’s role in MDS by first analyzing cells from healthy donors and MDS patients, including patients with refractory anemia, refractory anemia with ring sideroblasts, and refractory anemia with excess blasts type 1 and 2.

The researchers observed increased gene expression of HIF1A-induced genes in the cells from MDS patients. The team also found a high frequency of HIF1A-expressing cells in the MDS cohort, regardless of the patients’ IPSS-R risk.

The researchers conducted experiments in mouse models to study the onset of MDS and its genetic and molecular drivers. The results suggested that dysregulation of HIF1A has a central role in the onset of MDS, including different manifestations and symptoms found in patients.

“We know the genomes of MDS patients have recurrent mutations in different transcriptional, epigenetic, and metabolic regulators, but the incidence of these mutations does not directly correspond to the disease when it occurs,” Dr. Huang noted.

“Our study shows that malfunctions in the signaling of HIF1A could be generating the diverse medical problems doctors see in MDS patients.”

Specifically, the researchers found that MDS-associated mutations—DNMT3A, TET2, ASXL1, RUNX1, and MLL1—induced HIF1A signaling. And activation of HIF1A signaling in hematopoietic cells induced MDS phenotypes in mice.

The team said this suggests dysregulation of HIF1A signaling could generate diverse MDS phenotypes by “functioning as a signaling funnel” for MDS driver mutations.

The researchers also showed that inhibition of HIF1A could reverse MDS phenotypes. They said HIF1A deletion rescued dysplasia formation, partially rescued thrombocytopenia, and abrogated MDS development in mouse models.

Treatment with echinomycin, an inhibitor of HIF1A-mediated target gene activation, prolonged survival in mouse models of MDS and decreased MDSL cell numbers in the bone marrow and spleen.

This research was supported by the Kyoto University Foundation, the MDS Foundation, the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Research Foundation, the Leukemia Research Foundation, and others.

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Lab mouse

The transcription factor HIF1A could be a therapeutic target for “a broad spectrum” of patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), according to researchers.

Preclinical experiments indicated that HIF1A fuels the biological processes that cause different types of MDS.

Researchers also found that inhibiting HIF1A reversed MDS symptoms and prolonged survival in mouse models of MDS.

Gang Huang, PhD, of Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center in Ohio, and his colleagues reported these findings in Cancer Discovery.

The researchers identified HIF1A’s role in MDS by first analyzing cells from healthy donors and MDS patients, including patients with refractory anemia, refractory anemia with ring sideroblasts, and refractory anemia with excess blasts type 1 and 2.

The researchers observed increased gene expression of HIF1A-induced genes in the cells from MDS patients. The team also found a high frequency of HIF1A-expressing cells in the MDS cohort, regardless of the patients’ IPSS-R risk.

The researchers conducted experiments in mouse models to study the onset of MDS and its genetic and molecular drivers. The results suggested that dysregulation of HIF1A has a central role in the onset of MDS, including different manifestations and symptoms found in patients.

“We know the genomes of MDS patients have recurrent mutations in different transcriptional, epigenetic, and metabolic regulators, but the incidence of these mutations does not directly correspond to the disease when it occurs,” Dr. Huang noted.

“Our study shows that malfunctions in the signaling of HIF1A could be generating the diverse medical problems doctors see in MDS patients.”

Specifically, the researchers found that MDS-associated mutations—DNMT3A, TET2, ASXL1, RUNX1, and MLL1—induced HIF1A signaling. And activation of HIF1A signaling in hematopoietic cells induced MDS phenotypes in mice.

The team said this suggests dysregulation of HIF1A signaling could generate diverse MDS phenotypes by “functioning as a signaling funnel” for MDS driver mutations.

The researchers also showed that inhibition of HIF1A could reverse MDS phenotypes. They said HIF1A deletion rescued dysplasia formation, partially rescued thrombocytopenia, and abrogated MDS development in mouse models.

Treatment with echinomycin, an inhibitor of HIF1A-mediated target gene activation, prolonged survival in mouse models of MDS and decreased MDSL cell numbers in the bone marrow and spleen.

This research was supported by the Kyoto University Foundation, the MDS Foundation, the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Research Foundation, the Leukemia Research Foundation, and others.

Lab mouse

The transcription factor HIF1A could be a therapeutic target for “a broad spectrum” of patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), according to researchers.

Preclinical experiments indicated that HIF1A fuels the biological processes that cause different types of MDS.

Researchers also found that inhibiting HIF1A reversed MDS symptoms and prolonged survival in mouse models of MDS.

Gang Huang, PhD, of Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center in Ohio, and his colleagues reported these findings in Cancer Discovery.

The researchers identified HIF1A’s role in MDS by first analyzing cells from healthy donors and MDS patients, including patients with refractory anemia, refractory anemia with ring sideroblasts, and refractory anemia with excess blasts type 1 and 2.

The researchers observed increased gene expression of HIF1A-induced genes in the cells from MDS patients. The team also found a high frequency of HIF1A-expressing cells in the MDS cohort, regardless of the patients’ IPSS-R risk.

The researchers conducted experiments in mouse models to study the onset of MDS and its genetic and molecular drivers. The results suggested that dysregulation of HIF1A has a central role in the onset of MDS, including different manifestations and symptoms found in patients.

“We know the genomes of MDS patients have recurrent mutations in different transcriptional, epigenetic, and metabolic regulators, but the incidence of these mutations does not directly correspond to the disease when it occurs,” Dr. Huang noted.

“Our study shows that malfunctions in the signaling of HIF1A could be generating the diverse medical problems doctors see in MDS patients.”

Specifically, the researchers found that MDS-associated mutations—DNMT3A, TET2, ASXL1, RUNX1, and MLL1—induced HIF1A signaling. And activation of HIF1A signaling in hematopoietic cells induced MDS phenotypes in mice.

The team said this suggests dysregulation of HIF1A signaling could generate diverse MDS phenotypes by “functioning as a signaling funnel” for MDS driver mutations.

The researchers also showed that inhibition of HIF1A could reverse MDS phenotypes. They said HIF1A deletion rescued dysplasia formation, partially rescued thrombocytopenia, and abrogated MDS development in mouse models.

Treatment with echinomycin, an inhibitor of HIF1A-mediated target gene activation, prolonged survival in mouse models of MDS and decreased MDSL cell numbers in the bone marrow and spleen.

This research was supported by the Kyoto University Foundation, the MDS Foundation, the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Research Foundation, the Leukemia Research Foundation, and others.

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AMP publishes report on DNA variants in CMNs

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Polycythemia vera

A new report addresses the clinical relevance of DNA variants in chronic myeloid neoplasms (CMNs).

The report is intended to aid clinical laboratory professionals with the management of most CMNs and the development of high-throughput pan-myeloid sequencing testing panels.

The authors list 34 genes they consider “critical” for sequencing tests to help standardize clinical practice and improve care of patients with CMNs.

The Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) established a CMN Working Group to generate the report, which was published in The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics.

“The molecular pathology community has witnessed a recent explosion of scientific literature highlighting the clinical significance of small DNA variants in CMNs,” said Rebecca F. McClure, MD, a member of the AMP CMN Working Group and an associate professor at Health Sciences North/Horizon Santé-Nord in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.

“AMP’s working group recognized a clear, unmet need for evidence-based recommendations to assist in the development of the high-quality pan-myeloid gene panels that provide relevant diagnostic and prognostic information and enable monitoring of clonal architecture.”

The increasing availability of targeted, high-throughput, next-generation sequencing panels has enabled scientists to explore the genetic heterogeneity and clinical relevance of the small DNA variants in CMNs.

However, the biological complexity and multiple forms of CMNs have led to variability in the genes included on the available panels that are used to make an accurate diagnosis, provide reliable prognostic information, and select an appropriate therapy based on DNA variant profiles present at various time points.

AMP established its CMN Working Group to review the published literature on CMNs, summarize key findings that support clinical utility, and define a set of critical gene inclusions for all high-throughput pan-myeloid sequencing testing panels.

The group proposed the following 34 genes as a minimum recommended testing list: ASXL1, BCOR, BCORL1, CALR, CBL, CEBPA, CSF3R, DNMT3A, ETV6, EZH2, FLT3, IDH1, IDH2, JAK2, KIT, KRAS, MPL, NF1, NPM1, NRAS, PHF6, PPM1D, PTPN11, RAD21, RUNX1, SETBP1, SF3B1, SMC3, SRSF2, STAG2, TET2, TP53, U2AF1, and ZRSR2.

“While the goal of the study was to distill the literature for molecular pathologists, in doing so, we also revealed recurrent mutational patterns of clonal evolution that will [help] hematologist/oncologists, researchers, and pathologists understand how to interpret the results of these panels as they reveal critical biology of the neoplasms,” said Annette S. Kim, MD, PhD, CMN Working Group Chair and an associate professor at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts.

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Polycythemia vera

A new report addresses the clinical relevance of DNA variants in chronic myeloid neoplasms (CMNs).

The report is intended to aid clinical laboratory professionals with the management of most CMNs and the development of high-throughput pan-myeloid sequencing testing panels.

The authors list 34 genes they consider “critical” for sequencing tests to help standardize clinical practice and improve care of patients with CMNs.

The Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) established a CMN Working Group to generate the report, which was published in The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics.

“The molecular pathology community has witnessed a recent explosion of scientific literature highlighting the clinical significance of small DNA variants in CMNs,” said Rebecca F. McClure, MD, a member of the AMP CMN Working Group and an associate professor at Health Sciences North/Horizon Santé-Nord in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.

“AMP’s working group recognized a clear, unmet need for evidence-based recommendations to assist in the development of the high-quality pan-myeloid gene panels that provide relevant diagnostic and prognostic information and enable monitoring of clonal architecture.”

The increasing availability of targeted, high-throughput, next-generation sequencing panels has enabled scientists to explore the genetic heterogeneity and clinical relevance of the small DNA variants in CMNs.

However, the biological complexity and multiple forms of CMNs have led to variability in the genes included on the available panels that are used to make an accurate diagnosis, provide reliable prognostic information, and select an appropriate therapy based on DNA variant profiles present at various time points.

AMP established its CMN Working Group to review the published literature on CMNs, summarize key findings that support clinical utility, and define a set of critical gene inclusions for all high-throughput pan-myeloid sequencing testing panels.

The group proposed the following 34 genes as a minimum recommended testing list: ASXL1, BCOR, BCORL1, CALR, CBL, CEBPA, CSF3R, DNMT3A, ETV6, EZH2, FLT3, IDH1, IDH2, JAK2, KIT, KRAS, MPL, NF1, NPM1, NRAS, PHF6, PPM1D, PTPN11, RAD21, RUNX1, SETBP1, SF3B1, SMC3, SRSF2, STAG2, TET2, TP53, U2AF1, and ZRSR2.

“While the goal of the study was to distill the literature for molecular pathologists, in doing so, we also revealed recurrent mutational patterns of clonal evolution that will [help] hematologist/oncologists, researchers, and pathologists understand how to interpret the results of these panels as they reveal critical biology of the neoplasms,” said Annette S. Kim, MD, PhD, CMN Working Group Chair and an associate professor at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts.

Image courtesy of AFIP
Polycythemia vera

A new report addresses the clinical relevance of DNA variants in chronic myeloid neoplasms (CMNs).

The report is intended to aid clinical laboratory professionals with the management of most CMNs and the development of high-throughput pan-myeloid sequencing testing panels.

The authors list 34 genes they consider “critical” for sequencing tests to help standardize clinical practice and improve care of patients with CMNs.

The Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) established a CMN Working Group to generate the report, which was published in The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics.

“The molecular pathology community has witnessed a recent explosion of scientific literature highlighting the clinical significance of small DNA variants in CMNs,” said Rebecca F. McClure, MD, a member of the AMP CMN Working Group and an associate professor at Health Sciences North/Horizon Santé-Nord in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.

“AMP’s working group recognized a clear, unmet need for evidence-based recommendations to assist in the development of the high-quality pan-myeloid gene panels that provide relevant diagnostic and prognostic information and enable monitoring of clonal architecture.”

The increasing availability of targeted, high-throughput, next-generation sequencing panels has enabled scientists to explore the genetic heterogeneity and clinical relevance of the small DNA variants in CMNs.

However, the biological complexity and multiple forms of CMNs have led to variability in the genes included on the available panels that are used to make an accurate diagnosis, provide reliable prognostic information, and select an appropriate therapy based on DNA variant profiles present at various time points.

AMP established its CMN Working Group to review the published literature on CMNs, summarize key findings that support clinical utility, and define a set of critical gene inclusions for all high-throughput pan-myeloid sequencing testing panels.

The group proposed the following 34 genes as a minimum recommended testing list: ASXL1, BCOR, BCORL1, CALR, CBL, CEBPA, CSF3R, DNMT3A, ETV6, EZH2, FLT3, IDH1, IDH2, JAK2, KIT, KRAS, MPL, NF1, NPM1, NRAS, PHF6, PPM1D, PTPN11, RAD21, RUNX1, SETBP1, SF3B1, SMC3, SRSF2, STAG2, TET2, TP53, U2AF1, and ZRSR2.

“While the goal of the study was to distill the literature for molecular pathologists, in doing so, we also revealed recurrent mutational patterns of clonal evolution that will [help] hematologist/oncologists, researchers, and pathologists understand how to interpret the results of these panels as they reveal critical biology of the neoplasms,” said Annette S. Kim, MD, PhD, CMN Working Group Chair and an associate professor at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts.

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Partial hold placed on trial of drug for AML, MDS

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Micrograph showing MDS

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has placed a partial clinical hold on a phase 1b/2 study of OXi4503, a vascular disrupting agent.

In this trial (NCT02576301), researchers are evaluating OXi4503, alone and in combination with cytarabine, in patients with relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS).

The partial clinical hold applies to the 12.2 mg/m2 dose of OXi4503.

The FDA is allowing the continued treatment and enrollment of patients using a dose of 9.76 mg/m2.

The agency said additional data on patients receiving OXi4503 at 9.76 mg/m2 must be evaluated before dosing at 12.2 mg/m2 can be resumed.

The partial clinical hold is a result of 2 potential dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) observed at the 12.2 mg/m2 dose level.

One DLT was hypotension, which occurred shortly after initial treatment with OXi4503. The other DLT was acute hypoxic respiratory failure, which occurred approximately 2 weeks after receiving OXi4503 and cytarabine.

Both events were deemed “possibly related” to OXi4503, and both patients recovered following treatment.

The study protocol generally defines a DLT as any grade 3 serious adverse event where a relationship to OXi4503 cannot be ruled out.

“Although it is disappointing that we are not currently continuing with the higher dose of OXi4503, we look forward to gathering more safety and efficacy data at the previous dose level, where we observed 2 complete remissions in the 4 patients that we treated,” said William D. Schwieterman, MD, chief executive officer of Mateon Therapeutics, Inc., the company developing OXi4503.

About OXi4503

According to Mateon Therapeutics, OXi4503 has a dual mechanism of action that disrupts the shape of tumor bone marrow endothelial cells through reversible binding to tubulin at the colchicine binding site, downregulating intercellular adhesion molecules.

This alters the endothelial cell shape, releasing quiescent adherent tumor cells from bone marrow endothelial cells and activating the cell cycle, which makes the tumor cells vulnerable to chemotherapy.

OXi4503 also kills tumor cells directly via myeloperoxidase activation of an orthoquinone cytotoxic mediator.

In preclinical research, OXi4503 demonstrated activity against AML, both when given alone and in combination with bevacizumab. These results were published in Blood in 2010.

Clinical trials

In a phase 1 trial (NCT01085656), researchers evaluated OXi4503 in patients with relapsed or refractory AML or MDS. The goals were to determine the safety profile, maximum tolerated dose, and biologic activity of OXi4503.

The researchers said OXi4503 demonstrated preliminary evidence of disease response in heavily pre-treated, refractory AML and advanced MDS.

The maximum tolerated dose of OXi4503 was not identified, but adverse events attributable to the drug included hypertension, bone pain, fever, anemia, thrombocytopenia, and coagulopathies.

Results from this study were presented at the 2013 ASH Annual Meeting.

In 2015, Mateon Therapeutics initiated the phase 1b/2 study of OXi4503 (NCT02576301) that is now on partial clinical hold.

The phase 1 portion of this study was designed to assess the safety, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and preliminary efficacy of single-agent OXi4503 in patients with relapsed/refractory AML and MDS.

The phase 1 portion was also intended to determine the safety, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of OXi4503 plus intermediate-dose cytarabine.

The goal of the phase 2 portion is to assess the preliminary efficacy of OXi4503 and cytarabine in patients with AML and MDS.

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Micrograph showing MDS

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has placed a partial clinical hold on a phase 1b/2 study of OXi4503, a vascular disrupting agent.

In this trial (NCT02576301), researchers are evaluating OXi4503, alone and in combination with cytarabine, in patients with relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS).

The partial clinical hold applies to the 12.2 mg/m2 dose of OXi4503.

The FDA is allowing the continued treatment and enrollment of patients using a dose of 9.76 mg/m2.

The agency said additional data on patients receiving OXi4503 at 9.76 mg/m2 must be evaluated before dosing at 12.2 mg/m2 can be resumed.

The partial clinical hold is a result of 2 potential dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) observed at the 12.2 mg/m2 dose level.

One DLT was hypotension, which occurred shortly after initial treatment with OXi4503. The other DLT was acute hypoxic respiratory failure, which occurred approximately 2 weeks after receiving OXi4503 and cytarabine.

Both events were deemed “possibly related” to OXi4503, and both patients recovered following treatment.

The study protocol generally defines a DLT as any grade 3 serious adverse event where a relationship to OXi4503 cannot be ruled out.

“Although it is disappointing that we are not currently continuing with the higher dose of OXi4503, we look forward to gathering more safety and efficacy data at the previous dose level, where we observed 2 complete remissions in the 4 patients that we treated,” said William D. Schwieterman, MD, chief executive officer of Mateon Therapeutics, Inc., the company developing OXi4503.

About OXi4503

According to Mateon Therapeutics, OXi4503 has a dual mechanism of action that disrupts the shape of tumor bone marrow endothelial cells through reversible binding to tubulin at the colchicine binding site, downregulating intercellular adhesion molecules.

This alters the endothelial cell shape, releasing quiescent adherent tumor cells from bone marrow endothelial cells and activating the cell cycle, which makes the tumor cells vulnerable to chemotherapy.

OXi4503 also kills tumor cells directly via myeloperoxidase activation of an orthoquinone cytotoxic mediator.

In preclinical research, OXi4503 demonstrated activity against AML, both when given alone and in combination with bevacizumab. These results were published in Blood in 2010.

Clinical trials

In a phase 1 trial (NCT01085656), researchers evaluated OXi4503 in patients with relapsed or refractory AML or MDS. The goals were to determine the safety profile, maximum tolerated dose, and biologic activity of OXi4503.

The researchers said OXi4503 demonstrated preliminary evidence of disease response in heavily pre-treated, refractory AML and advanced MDS.

The maximum tolerated dose of OXi4503 was not identified, but adverse events attributable to the drug included hypertension, bone pain, fever, anemia, thrombocytopenia, and coagulopathies.

Results from this study were presented at the 2013 ASH Annual Meeting.

In 2015, Mateon Therapeutics initiated the phase 1b/2 study of OXi4503 (NCT02576301) that is now on partial clinical hold.

The phase 1 portion of this study was designed to assess the safety, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and preliminary efficacy of single-agent OXi4503 in patients with relapsed/refractory AML and MDS.

The phase 1 portion was also intended to determine the safety, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of OXi4503 plus intermediate-dose cytarabine.

The goal of the phase 2 portion is to assess the preliminary efficacy of OXi4503 and cytarabine in patients with AML and MDS.

Micrograph showing MDS

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has placed a partial clinical hold on a phase 1b/2 study of OXi4503, a vascular disrupting agent.

In this trial (NCT02576301), researchers are evaluating OXi4503, alone and in combination with cytarabine, in patients with relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS).

The partial clinical hold applies to the 12.2 mg/m2 dose of OXi4503.

The FDA is allowing the continued treatment and enrollment of patients using a dose of 9.76 mg/m2.

The agency said additional data on patients receiving OXi4503 at 9.76 mg/m2 must be evaluated before dosing at 12.2 mg/m2 can be resumed.

The partial clinical hold is a result of 2 potential dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) observed at the 12.2 mg/m2 dose level.

One DLT was hypotension, which occurred shortly after initial treatment with OXi4503. The other DLT was acute hypoxic respiratory failure, which occurred approximately 2 weeks after receiving OXi4503 and cytarabine.

Both events were deemed “possibly related” to OXi4503, and both patients recovered following treatment.

The study protocol generally defines a DLT as any grade 3 serious adverse event where a relationship to OXi4503 cannot be ruled out.

“Although it is disappointing that we are not currently continuing with the higher dose of OXi4503, we look forward to gathering more safety and efficacy data at the previous dose level, where we observed 2 complete remissions in the 4 patients that we treated,” said William D. Schwieterman, MD, chief executive officer of Mateon Therapeutics, Inc., the company developing OXi4503.

About OXi4503

According to Mateon Therapeutics, OXi4503 has a dual mechanism of action that disrupts the shape of tumor bone marrow endothelial cells through reversible binding to tubulin at the colchicine binding site, downregulating intercellular adhesion molecules.

This alters the endothelial cell shape, releasing quiescent adherent tumor cells from bone marrow endothelial cells and activating the cell cycle, which makes the tumor cells vulnerable to chemotherapy.

OXi4503 also kills tumor cells directly via myeloperoxidase activation of an orthoquinone cytotoxic mediator.

In preclinical research, OXi4503 demonstrated activity against AML, both when given alone and in combination with bevacizumab. These results were published in Blood in 2010.

Clinical trials

In a phase 1 trial (NCT01085656), researchers evaluated OXi4503 in patients with relapsed or refractory AML or MDS. The goals were to determine the safety profile, maximum tolerated dose, and biologic activity of OXi4503.

The researchers said OXi4503 demonstrated preliminary evidence of disease response in heavily pre-treated, refractory AML and advanced MDS.

The maximum tolerated dose of OXi4503 was not identified, but adverse events attributable to the drug included hypertension, bone pain, fever, anemia, thrombocytopenia, and coagulopathies.

Results from this study were presented at the 2013 ASH Annual Meeting.

In 2015, Mateon Therapeutics initiated the phase 1b/2 study of OXi4503 (NCT02576301) that is now on partial clinical hold.

The phase 1 portion of this study was designed to assess the safety, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and preliminary efficacy of single-agent OXi4503 in patients with relapsed/refractory AML and MDS.

The phase 1 portion was also intended to determine the safety, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of OXi4503 plus intermediate-dose cytarabine.

The goal of the phase 2 portion is to assess the preliminary efficacy of OXi4503 and cytarabine in patients with AML and MDS.

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Auto-HSCT linked to higher AML, MDS risk

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Auto-HSCT linked to higher AML, MDS risk

 

Photo by Luis Alvaz
Apheresis machine

 

Patients undergoing autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant (auto-HSCT) for lymphoma or myeloma have an increased risk of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), according to a retrospective study.

 

The study suggested these patients have 10 to 100 times the risk of AML or MDS as the general population.

 

The elevated risk also exceeds that of similar lymphoma and myeloma patients largely untreated with auto-HSCT.

 

Tomas Radivoyevitch, PhD, of the Cleveland Clinic Foundation in Ohio, and his colleagues reported these findings in Leukemia Research.

 

The investigators noted that exposure to DNA-damaging drugs and ionizing radiation—both used in auto-HSCT—is known to increase the risk of AML and MDS.

 

With this in mind, the team analyzed data on auto-HSCT recipients reported to the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research (CIBMTR).

 

Analyses were based on 9028 patients undergoing auto-HSCT from 1995 to 2010 for Hodgkin lymphoma (n=916), non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL, n=3546), or plasma cell myeloma (n=4566). Their median duration of follow-up was 90 months, 110 months, and 97 months, respectively.

 

Overall, 3.7% of the cohort developed AML or MDS after their transplant.

 

More aggressive transplant protocols increased the likelihood of this outcome. The risk of developing AML or MDS was higher for:

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • Hodgkin lymphoma patients who received conditioning with total body radiation versus chemotherapy alone (hazard ratio [HR], 4.0)
  • NHL patients who received conditioning with total body radiation (HR, 1.7) or with busulfan and melphalan or cyclophosphamide (HR, 1.8) versus the BEAM regimen (bischloroethylnitrosourea, etoposide, cytarabine, and melphalan)
  • NHL or myeloma patients who received 3 or more lines of chemotherapy versus 1 line (HR, 1.9 for NHL and 1.8 for myeloma)
  • NHL patients who underwent transplant in 2005 to 2010 versus 1995 to 1999 (HR, 2.1).

Patients reported to the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results database with the same lymphoma and myeloma diagnoses, few of whom underwent auto-HSCT, had risks of AML and MDS that were 5 to 10 times higher than the background level in the population.

 

However, the study auto-HSCT cohort had a risk of AML that was 10 to 50 times higher and a relative risk of MDS that was roughly 100 times higher than the background level.

 

“These increases may be related to exposure to high doses of DNA-damaging drugs given for [auto-HSCT], but this hypothesis can only be tested in a prospective study,” Dr Radivoyevitch and his coinvestigators wrote.

 

The reason for the greater elevation of MDS risk, compared with AML risk, is unknown.

 

“One possible explanation is that many cases of MDS evolve to AML, and that earlier diagnosis from increased post-transplant surveillance resulted in a deficiency of AML,” the investigators wrote. “A second is based on steeper MDS versus AML incidences versus age . . . and the possibility that transplantation recipient marrow ages (ie, marrow biological ages) are perhaps decades older than calendar ages.”

 

The study authors said they had no relevant conflicts of interest. The CIBMTR is supported by several US government agencies and numerous pharmaceutical companies. 

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Photo by Luis Alvaz
Apheresis machine

 

Patients undergoing autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant (auto-HSCT) for lymphoma or myeloma have an increased risk of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), according to a retrospective study.

 

The study suggested these patients have 10 to 100 times the risk of AML or MDS as the general population.

 

The elevated risk also exceeds that of similar lymphoma and myeloma patients largely untreated with auto-HSCT.

 

Tomas Radivoyevitch, PhD, of the Cleveland Clinic Foundation in Ohio, and his colleagues reported these findings in Leukemia Research.

 

The investigators noted that exposure to DNA-damaging drugs and ionizing radiation—both used in auto-HSCT—is known to increase the risk of AML and MDS.

 

With this in mind, the team analyzed data on auto-HSCT recipients reported to the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research (CIBMTR).

 

Analyses were based on 9028 patients undergoing auto-HSCT from 1995 to 2010 for Hodgkin lymphoma (n=916), non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL, n=3546), or plasma cell myeloma (n=4566). Their median duration of follow-up was 90 months, 110 months, and 97 months, respectively.

 

Overall, 3.7% of the cohort developed AML or MDS after their transplant.

 

More aggressive transplant protocols increased the likelihood of this outcome. The risk of developing AML or MDS was higher for:

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • Hodgkin lymphoma patients who received conditioning with total body radiation versus chemotherapy alone (hazard ratio [HR], 4.0)
  • NHL patients who received conditioning with total body radiation (HR, 1.7) or with busulfan and melphalan or cyclophosphamide (HR, 1.8) versus the BEAM regimen (bischloroethylnitrosourea, etoposide, cytarabine, and melphalan)
  • NHL or myeloma patients who received 3 or more lines of chemotherapy versus 1 line (HR, 1.9 for NHL and 1.8 for myeloma)
  • NHL patients who underwent transplant in 2005 to 2010 versus 1995 to 1999 (HR, 2.1).

Patients reported to the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results database with the same lymphoma and myeloma diagnoses, few of whom underwent auto-HSCT, had risks of AML and MDS that were 5 to 10 times higher than the background level in the population.

 

However, the study auto-HSCT cohort had a risk of AML that was 10 to 50 times higher and a relative risk of MDS that was roughly 100 times higher than the background level.

 

“These increases may be related to exposure to high doses of DNA-damaging drugs given for [auto-HSCT], but this hypothesis can only be tested in a prospective study,” Dr Radivoyevitch and his coinvestigators wrote.

 

The reason for the greater elevation of MDS risk, compared with AML risk, is unknown.

 

“One possible explanation is that many cases of MDS evolve to AML, and that earlier diagnosis from increased post-transplant surveillance resulted in a deficiency of AML,” the investigators wrote. “A second is based on steeper MDS versus AML incidences versus age . . . and the possibility that transplantation recipient marrow ages (ie, marrow biological ages) are perhaps decades older than calendar ages.”

 

The study authors said they had no relevant conflicts of interest. The CIBMTR is supported by several US government agencies and numerous pharmaceutical companies. 

 

Photo by Luis Alvaz
Apheresis machine

 

Patients undergoing autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant (auto-HSCT) for lymphoma or myeloma have an increased risk of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), according to a retrospective study.

 

The study suggested these patients have 10 to 100 times the risk of AML or MDS as the general population.

 

The elevated risk also exceeds that of similar lymphoma and myeloma patients largely untreated with auto-HSCT.

 

Tomas Radivoyevitch, PhD, of the Cleveland Clinic Foundation in Ohio, and his colleagues reported these findings in Leukemia Research.

 

The investigators noted that exposure to DNA-damaging drugs and ionizing radiation—both used in auto-HSCT—is known to increase the risk of AML and MDS.

 

With this in mind, the team analyzed data on auto-HSCT recipients reported to the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research (CIBMTR).

 

Analyses were based on 9028 patients undergoing auto-HSCT from 1995 to 2010 for Hodgkin lymphoma (n=916), non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL, n=3546), or plasma cell myeloma (n=4566). Their median duration of follow-up was 90 months, 110 months, and 97 months, respectively.

 

Overall, 3.7% of the cohort developed AML or MDS after their transplant.

 

More aggressive transplant protocols increased the likelihood of this outcome. The risk of developing AML or MDS was higher for:

 

 

 

 

 

 

  • Hodgkin lymphoma patients who received conditioning with total body radiation versus chemotherapy alone (hazard ratio [HR], 4.0)
  • NHL patients who received conditioning with total body radiation (HR, 1.7) or with busulfan and melphalan or cyclophosphamide (HR, 1.8) versus the BEAM regimen (bischloroethylnitrosourea, etoposide, cytarabine, and melphalan)
  • NHL or myeloma patients who received 3 or more lines of chemotherapy versus 1 line (HR, 1.9 for NHL and 1.8 for myeloma)
  • NHL patients who underwent transplant in 2005 to 2010 versus 1995 to 1999 (HR, 2.1).

Patients reported to the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results database with the same lymphoma and myeloma diagnoses, few of whom underwent auto-HSCT, had risks of AML and MDS that were 5 to 10 times higher than the background level in the population.

 

However, the study auto-HSCT cohort had a risk of AML that was 10 to 50 times higher and a relative risk of MDS that was roughly 100 times higher than the background level.

 

“These increases may be related to exposure to high doses of DNA-damaging drugs given for [auto-HSCT], but this hypothesis can only be tested in a prospective study,” Dr Radivoyevitch and his coinvestigators wrote.

 

The reason for the greater elevation of MDS risk, compared with AML risk, is unknown.

 

“One possible explanation is that many cases of MDS evolve to AML, and that earlier diagnosis from increased post-transplant surveillance resulted in a deficiency of AML,” the investigators wrote. “A second is based on steeper MDS versus AML incidences versus age . . . and the possibility that transplantation recipient marrow ages (ie, marrow biological ages) are perhaps decades older than calendar ages.”

 

The study authors said they had no relevant conflicts of interest. The CIBMTR is supported by several US government agencies and numerous pharmaceutical companies. 

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Familial risk of myeloid malignancies

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Mon, 08/13/2018 - 00:01
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Familial risk of myeloid malignancies

Three generations of women in a family

A large study has revealed “the strongest evidence yet” supporting genetic susceptibility to myeloid malignancies, according to a researcher.

The study showed that first-degree relatives of patients with myeloid malignancies had double the risk of developing a myeloid malignancy themselves, when compared to the general population.

The researchers observed significant risks for developing acute myeloid leukemia (AML), myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), essential thrombocythemia (ET), and polycythemia vera (PV).

“Our study provides the strongest evidence yet for inherited risk for these diseases—evidence that has proved evasive before, in part, because these cancers are relatively uncommon, and our ability to characterize these diseases has, until recently, been limited,” said Amit Sud, MBChB, PhD, of The Institute of Cancer Research in London, UK.

Dr Sud and his colleagues described their research in a letter to Blood.

The researchers analyzed data from the Swedish Family-Cancer Database, which included 93,199 first-degree relatives of 35,037 patients with myeloid malignancies. The patients had been diagnosed between 1958 and 2015.

First-degree relatives of the patients had an increased risk of all myeloid malignancies, with a standardized incidence ratio (SIR) of 1.99 (95% CI 1.12-2.04).

For individual diseases, there was a significant association between family history and increased risk for:

  • AML—SIR=1.53 (95% CI 1.21-2.17)
  • ET—SIR=6.30 (95% CI 3.95-9.54)
  • MDS—SIR=6.87 (95% CI 4.07-10.86)
  • PV—SIR=7.66 (95% CI 5.74-10.02).

Dr Sud and his colleagues noted that the strongest familial relative risks tended to occur for the same disease, but there were significant associations between different myeloid malignancies as well.

Risk by age group

The researchers also looked at familial relative risk for the same disease by patients’ age at diagnosis and observed a significantly increased risk for younger cases for all myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) combined, PV, and MDS.

The SIRs for MPNs were 6.46 (95% CI 5.12-8.04) for patients age 59 or younger and 4.15 (95% CI 3.38-5.04) for patients older than 59.

The SIRs for PV were 10.90 (95% CI 7.12-15.97) for patients age 59 or younger and 5.96 (95% CI 3.93-8.67) for patients older than 59.

The SIRs for MDS were 11.95 (95% CI 6.36-20.43) for patients age 68 or younger and 3.27 (95% CI 1.06-7.63) for patients older than 68.

Risk by number of relatives

Dr Sud and his colleagues also discovered that familial relative risks of all myeloid malignancies and MPNs were significantly associated with the number of first-degree relatives affected by myeloid malignancies or MPNs.

The SIRs for first-degree relatives with 2 or more affected relatives were 4.55 (95% CI 2.08-8.64) for all myeloid malignancies and 17.82 (95% CI 5.79-24.89) for MPNs.

The SIRs for first-degree relatives with 1 affected relative were 1.96 (95% CI 1.79-2.15) for all myeloid malignancies and 4.83 (95% CI 4.14-5.60) for MPNs.

The researchers said these results suggest inherited genetic changes increase the risk of myeloid malignancies, although environmental factors shared in families could also play a role.

“In the future, our findings could help identify people at higher risk than normal because of their family background who could be prioritized for medical help like screening to catch the disease earlier if it arises,” Dr Sud said.

This study was funded by German Cancer Aid, the Swedish Research Council, ALF funding from Region Skåne, DKFZ, and Bloodwise.

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Three generations of women in a family

A large study has revealed “the strongest evidence yet” supporting genetic susceptibility to myeloid malignancies, according to a researcher.

The study showed that first-degree relatives of patients with myeloid malignancies had double the risk of developing a myeloid malignancy themselves, when compared to the general population.

The researchers observed significant risks for developing acute myeloid leukemia (AML), myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), essential thrombocythemia (ET), and polycythemia vera (PV).

“Our study provides the strongest evidence yet for inherited risk for these diseases—evidence that has proved evasive before, in part, because these cancers are relatively uncommon, and our ability to characterize these diseases has, until recently, been limited,” said Amit Sud, MBChB, PhD, of The Institute of Cancer Research in London, UK.

Dr Sud and his colleagues described their research in a letter to Blood.

The researchers analyzed data from the Swedish Family-Cancer Database, which included 93,199 first-degree relatives of 35,037 patients with myeloid malignancies. The patients had been diagnosed between 1958 and 2015.

First-degree relatives of the patients had an increased risk of all myeloid malignancies, with a standardized incidence ratio (SIR) of 1.99 (95% CI 1.12-2.04).

For individual diseases, there was a significant association between family history and increased risk for:

  • AML—SIR=1.53 (95% CI 1.21-2.17)
  • ET—SIR=6.30 (95% CI 3.95-9.54)
  • MDS—SIR=6.87 (95% CI 4.07-10.86)
  • PV—SIR=7.66 (95% CI 5.74-10.02).

Dr Sud and his colleagues noted that the strongest familial relative risks tended to occur for the same disease, but there were significant associations between different myeloid malignancies as well.

Risk by age group

The researchers also looked at familial relative risk for the same disease by patients’ age at diagnosis and observed a significantly increased risk for younger cases for all myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) combined, PV, and MDS.

The SIRs for MPNs were 6.46 (95% CI 5.12-8.04) for patients age 59 or younger and 4.15 (95% CI 3.38-5.04) for patients older than 59.

The SIRs for PV were 10.90 (95% CI 7.12-15.97) for patients age 59 or younger and 5.96 (95% CI 3.93-8.67) for patients older than 59.

The SIRs for MDS were 11.95 (95% CI 6.36-20.43) for patients age 68 or younger and 3.27 (95% CI 1.06-7.63) for patients older than 68.

Risk by number of relatives

Dr Sud and his colleagues also discovered that familial relative risks of all myeloid malignancies and MPNs were significantly associated with the number of first-degree relatives affected by myeloid malignancies or MPNs.

The SIRs for first-degree relatives with 2 or more affected relatives were 4.55 (95% CI 2.08-8.64) for all myeloid malignancies and 17.82 (95% CI 5.79-24.89) for MPNs.

The SIRs for first-degree relatives with 1 affected relative were 1.96 (95% CI 1.79-2.15) for all myeloid malignancies and 4.83 (95% CI 4.14-5.60) for MPNs.

The researchers said these results suggest inherited genetic changes increase the risk of myeloid malignancies, although environmental factors shared in families could also play a role.

“In the future, our findings could help identify people at higher risk than normal because of their family background who could be prioritized for medical help like screening to catch the disease earlier if it arises,” Dr Sud said.

This study was funded by German Cancer Aid, the Swedish Research Council, ALF funding from Region Skåne, DKFZ, and Bloodwise.

Three generations of women in a family

A large study has revealed “the strongest evidence yet” supporting genetic susceptibility to myeloid malignancies, according to a researcher.

The study showed that first-degree relatives of patients with myeloid malignancies had double the risk of developing a myeloid malignancy themselves, when compared to the general population.

The researchers observed significant risks for developing acute myeloid leukemia (AML), myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), essential thrombocythemia (ET), and polycythemia vera (PV).

“Our study provides the strongest evidence yet for inherited risk for these diseases—evidence that has proved evasive before, in part, because these cancers are relatively uncommon, and our ability to characterize these diseases has, until recently, been limited,” said Amit Sud, MBChB, PhD, of The Institute of Cancer Research in London, UK.

Dr Sud and his colleagues described their research in a letter to Blood.

The researchers analyzed data from the Swedish Family-Cancer Database, which included 93,199 first-degree relatives of 35,037 patients with myeloid malignancies. The patients had been diagnosed between 1958 and 2015.

First-degree relatives of the patients had an increased risk of all myeloid malignancies, with a standardized incidence ratio (SIR) of 1.99 (95% CI 1.12-2.04).

For individual diseases, there was a significant association between family history and increased risk for:

  • AML—SIR=1.53 (95% CI 1.21-2.17)
  • ET—SIR=6.30 (95% CI 3.95-9.54)
  • MDS—SIR=6.87 (95% CI 4.07-10.86)
  • PV—SIR=7.66 (95% CI 5.74-10.02).

Dr Sud and his colleagues noted that the strongest familial relative risks tended to occur for the same disease, but there were significant associations between different myeloid malignancies as well.

Risk by age group

The researchers also looked at familial relative risk for the same disease by patients’ age at diagnosis and observed a significantly increased risk for younger cases for all myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) combined, PV, and MDS.

The SIRs for MPNs were 6.46 (95% CI 5.12-8.04) for patients age 59 or younger and 4.15 (95% CI 3.38-5.04) for patients older than 59.

The SIRs for PV were 10.90 (95% CI 7.12-15.97) for patients age 59 or younger and 5.96 (95% CI 3.93-8.67) for patients older than 59.

The SIRs for MDS were 11.95 (95% CI 6.36-20.43) for patients age 68 or younger and 3.27 (95% CI 1.06-7.63) for patients older than 68.

Risk by number of relatives

Dr Sud and his colleagues also discovered that familial relative risks of all myeloid malignancies and MPNs were significantly associated with the number of first-degree relatives affected by myeloid malignancies or MPNs.

The SIRs for first-degree relatives with 2 or more affected relatives were 4.55 (95% CI 2.08-8.64) for all myeloid malignancies and 17.82 (95% CI 5.79-24.89) for MPNs.

The SIRs for first-degree relatives with 1 affected relative were 1.96 (95% CI 1.79-2.15) for all myeloid malignancies and 4.83 (95% CI 4.14-5.60) for MPNs.

The researchers said these results suggest inherited genetic changes increase the risk of myeloid malignancies, although environmental factors shared in families could also play a role.

“In the future, our findings could help identify people at higher risk than normal because of their family background who could be prioritized for medical help like screening to catch the disease earlier if it arises,” Dr Sud said.

This study was funded by German Cancer Aid, the Swedish Research Council, ALF funding from Region Skåne, DKFZ, and Bloodwise.

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Increased B-cell lymphoma risk with JAK1/2 inhibitors

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Fri, 12/16/2022 - 11:06

Patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms treated with Janus-kinase (JAK) 1/2 inhibitors may be at significantly increased risk of aggressive B cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas, according to a study published in Blood.

A retrospective cohort study of 626 Viennese patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms – 69 of whom were treated with JAK1/2 inhibitors – found that 4 of the 69 patients (5.8%) developed aggressive B-cell lymphoma, compared with just 2 patients (0.36%) in the rest of the group. This represented a significant, 16-fold higher risk of aggressive B cell lymphoma associated with JAK1/2 inhibitor therapy (P = .0017).

The lymphoma was diagnosed within 13-35 months of starting JAK1/2 inhibitors. In three patients, the disease was in the bone marrow and peripheral blood, one patient had it in mammary tissue, and another had it in mucosal tissue. All four lymphomas showed positive MYC and p53 staining.

All four patients had been treated with ruxolitinib, one was also treated with fedratinib, and three of the four had been pretreated with alkylating agents.

Meanwhile, a second retrospective cohort study in Paris of 929 patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms, reported in the same paper, found that 3.51% of those treated with ruxolitinib developed lymphoma, compared with 0.23% of conventionally-treated patients.

Using archived bone marrow samples from 54 of the 69 patients treated with JAK1/2 inhibitors, researchers discovered that 15.9% of them – including three of the B-cell lymphoma patients (the fourth was not tested) – had a preexisting B cell clone. This was present as early as 47-70 months before the lymphoma diagnosis.

“In patients, the clonal B-cell population was present as long as 6 years before overt lymphoma and preceded JAK1/2 inhibition which offers the opportunity to determine patients at risk,” wrote Edit Porpaczy, MD, of the Comprehensive Cancer Center at the Medical University of Vienna, and her coauthors. “Targeted inhibition of JAK-STAT signaling appears to be required to trigger the appearance of the B-cell clone as other treatments eliminating the myeloid cell load in men do not exert a comparable effect.”

In the Viennese cohort, three of the lymphomas were aggressive CD19+ B-cell type, and the fourth was a nonspecified high-grade B-cell lymphoma.

Researchers also looked at the effects of JAK1/2 inhibition in STAT1-/- mice, and found that two-thirds developed a spontaneous myeloid hyperplasia with the concomitant presence of aberrant B-cells.

“Upon STAT1-deficiency myeloid hyperplasia is paralleled by the occurrence of a malignant B-cell clone, which evolves into disease upon bone-marrow transplantation and gives rise to a leukemic lymphoma phenotype,” the authors wrote.

The study was supported by the Austrian Science Fund, the Anniversary Fund of the Austrian National Bank and the WWTF Precision Medicine Program. Several authors reported support, funding or advisory board positions with the pharmaceutical industry.

SOURCE: Porpaczy E et al. Blood. 2018 Jun 14. doi: 10.1182/blood-2017-10-810739.

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Patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms treated with Janus-kinase (JAK) 1/2 inhibitors may be at significantly increased risk of aggressive B cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas, according to a study published in Blood.

A retrospective cohort study of 626 Viennese patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms – 69 of whom were treated with JAK1/2 inhibitors – found that 4 of the 69 patients (5.8%) developed aggressive B-cell lymphoma, compared with just 2 patients (0.36%) in the rest of the group. This represented a significant, 16-fold higher risk of aggressive B cell lymphoma associated with JAK1/2 inhibitor therapy (P = .0017).

The lymphoma was diagnosed within 13-35 months of starting JAK1/2 inhibitors. In three patients, the disease was in the bone marrow and peripheral blood, one patient had it in mammary tissue, and another had it in mucosal tissue. All four lymphomas showed positive MYC and p53 staining.

All four patients had been treated with ruxolitinib, one was also treated with fedratinib, and three of the four had been pretreated with alkylating agents.

Meanwhile, a second retrospective cohort study in Paris of 929 patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms, reported in the same paper, found that 3.51% of those treated with ruxolitinib developed lymphoma, compared with 0.23% of conventionally-treated patients.

Using archived bone marrow samples from 54 of the 69 patients treated with JAK1/2 inhibitors, researchers discovered that 15.9% of them – including three of the B-cell lymphoma patients (the fourth was not tested) – had a preexisting B cell clone. This was present as early as 47-70 months before the lymphoma diagnosis.

“In patients, the clonal B-cell population was present as long as 6 years before overt lymphoma and preceded JAK1/2 inhibition which offers the opportunity to determine patients at risk,” wrote Edit Porpaczy, MD, of the Comprehensive Cancer Center at the Medical University of Vienna, and her coauthors. “Targeted inhibition of JAK-STAT signaling appears to be required to trigger the appearance of the B-cell clone as other treatments eliminating the myeloid cell load in men do not exert a comparable effect.”

In the Viennese cohort, three of the lymphomas were aggressive CD19+ B-cell type, and the fourth was a nonspecified high-grade B-cell lymphoma.

Researchers also looked at the effects of JAK1/2 inhibition in STAT1-/- mice, and found that two-thirds developed a spontaneous myeloid hyperplasia with the concomitant presence of aberrant B-cells.

“Upon STAT1-deficiency myeloid hyperplasia is paralleled by the occurrence of a malignant B-cell clone, which evolves into disease upon bone-marrow transplantation and gives rise to a leukemic lymphoma phenotype,” the authors wrote.

The study was supported by the Austrian Science Fund, the Anniversary Fund of the Austrian National Bank and the WWTF Precision Medicine Program. Several authors reported support, funding or advisory board positions with the pharmaceutical industry.

SOURCE: Porpaczy E et al. Blood. 2018 Jun 14. doi: 10.1182/blood-2017-10-810739.

Patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms treated with Janus-kinase (JAK) 1/2 inhibitors may be at significantly increased risk of aggressive B cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas, according to a study published in Blood.

A retrospective cohort study of 626 Viennese patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms – 69 of whom were treated with JAK1/2 inhibitors – found that 4 of the 69 patients (5.8%) developed aggressive B-cell lymphoma, compared with just 2 patients (0.36%) in the rest of the group. This represented a significant, 16-fold higher risk of aggressive B cell lymphoma associated with JAK1/2 inhibitor therapy (P = .0017).

The lymphoma was diagnosed within 13-35 months of starting JAK1/2 inhibitors. In three patients, the disease was in the bone marrow and peripheral blood, one patient had it in mammary tissue, and another had it in mucosal tissue. All four lymphomas showed positive MYC and p53 staining.

All four patients had been treated with ruxolitinib, one was also treated with fedratinib, and three of the four had been pretreated with alkylating agents.

Meanwhile, a second retrospective cohort study in Paris of 929 patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms, reported in the same paper, found that 3.51% of those treated with ruxolitinib developed lymphoma, compared with 0.23% of conventionally-treated patients.

Using archived bone marrow samples from 54 of the 69 patients treated with JAK1/2 inhibitors, researchers discovered that 15.9% of them – including three of the B-cell lymphoma patients (the fourth was not tested) – had a preexisting B cell clone. This was present as early as 47-70 months before the lymphoma diagnosis.

“In patients, the clonal B-cell population was present as long as 6 years before overt lymphoma and preceded JAK1/2 inhibition which offers the opportunity to determine patients at risk,” wrote Edit Porpaczy, MD, of the Comprehensive Cancer Center at the Medical University of Vienna, and her coauthors. “Targeted inhibition of JAK-STAT signaling appears to be required to trigger the appearance of the B-cell clone as other treatments eliminating the myeloid cell load in men do not exert a comparable effect.”

In the Viennese cohort, three of the lymphomas were aggressive CD19+ B-cell type, and the fourth was a nonspecified high-grade B-cell lymphoma.

Researchers also looked at the effects of JAK1/2 inhibition in STAT1-/- mice, and found that two-thirds developed a spontaneous myeloid hyperplasia with the concomitant presence of aberrant B-cells.

“Upon STAT1-deficiency myeloid hyperplasia is paralleled by the occurrence of a malignant B-cell clone, which evolves into disease upon bone-marrow transplantation and gives rise to a leukemic lymphoma phenotype,” the authors wrote.

The study was supported by the Austrian Science Fund, the Anniversary Fund of the Austrian National Bank and the WWTF Precision Medicine Program. Several authors reported support, funding or advisory board positions with the pharmaceutical industry.

SOURCE: Porpaczy E et al. Blood. 2018 Jun 14. doi: 10.1182/blood-2017-10-810739.

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Key clinical point: JAK1/2 inhibition in patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms is linked to a higher risk of aggressive lymphoma.

Major finding: Patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms treated with JAK1/2 inhibitors have a 16-fold higher incidence of lymphoma.

Study details: A retrospective cohort study of 626 patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms.

Disclosures: The study was supported by the Austrian Science Fund, the Anniversary Fund of the Austrian National Bank, and the WWTF Precision Medicine Program. Several authors reported support, funding, or advisory board positions with the pharmaceutical industry.

Source: Porpaczy E et al. Blood. 2018 Jun 14. doi: 10.1182/blood-2017-10-810739.

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